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Anand Agricultural University, Anand

Anand Agricultural University (AAU) was established in 2004 at Anand with the support of the Government of Gujarat, Act No.(Guj 5 of 2004) dated April 29, 2004. Caved out of the erstwhile Gujarat Agricultural University (GAU), the dream institution of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and Dr. K. M. Munshi, the AAU was set up to provide support to the farming community in three facets namely education, research and extension activities in Agriculture, Horticulture Engineering, product Processing and Home Science. At present there seven Colleges, seventeen Research Centers and six Extension Education Institute working in nine districts of Gujarat namely Ahmedabad, Anand, Dahod, Kheda, Panchmahal, Vadodara, Mahisagar, Botad and Chhotaudepur AAU's activities have expanded to span newer commodity sectors such as soil health card, bio-diesel, medicinal plants apart from the mandatory ones like rice, maize, tobacco, vegetable crops, fruit crops, forage crops, animal breeding, nutrition and dairy products etc. the core of AAU's operating philosophy however, continues to create the partnership between the rural people and committed academic as the basic for sustainable rural development. In pursuing its various programmes AAU's overall mission is to promote sustainable growth and economic independence in rural society. AAU aims to do this through education, research and extension education. Thus, AAU works towards the empowerment of the farmers.

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  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    EFFECTS OF DIETARY SUPPLEMENTATION OF PREBIOTIC, PROBIOTIC AND SYNBIOTIC AS AN ALTERNATIVE TO ANTIBIOTIC GROWTH PROMOTER ON PERFORMANCE OF COMMERCIAL BROILERS
    (POULTRY RESEARCH STATION COLLEGE OF VETERINARY SCIENCE & A. H. ANAND AGRICULTURAL UNIVERSITY, ANAND, 2019) Patel Ajaykumar; Dr. F. P. Savaliya
    The experiment was conducted to study the effects of dietary supplementation of prebiotic, probiotic and synbiotic as an alternative to antibiotic growth promoter on performance of commercial broilers. Two hundred and twenty four (224) straight run day-old commercial broiler chicks were distributed randomly to seven treatment groups, each treatment group consisted of four replicates, each of 8 chicks leading to 32 chicks per treatment. The experiment was conducted for a period of six weeks. The seven treatments were divided as follows: T1 diet was kept as control (without antibiotic and without prebiotic, probiotic and synbiotic). T2 diet contained bacitracin methylene disalicylate (BMD) as AGP @ 50g/100 kg feed, T3 diet contained prebiotic [Mannan-oligosaccharides (MOS) @ 0.05%], T4 diet contained probiotic-1 (Lactobacillus and Saccharomyces spp. @ 0.05%), T5 diet contained probiotic-2 (Clostridium and Bacillus spp. @ 0.05%), T6 diet contained synbiotic-1 (MOS @ 0.05% + Lactobacillus and Saccharomyces spp. @ and T7 diet contained synbiotic-2 (MOS @ 0.05% + Clostridium and Bacillus spp. @ 0.05%).