Estimation of the relative bioavailability of inorganic copper sources for chicks using tissue uptake of copper.

@article{Ledoux1991EstimationOT,
  title={Estimation of the relative bioavailability of inorganic copper sources for chicks using tissue uptake of copper.},
  author={David R. Ledoux and Pamela R. Henry and Clarence B. Ammerman and P. V. Rao and Richard D. Miles},
  journal={Journal of animal science},
  year={1991},
  volume={69 1},
  pages={
          215-22
        }
}
An experiment was conducted with 208 day-old male Cobb feather-sexed chicks to study tissue accumulation of Cu as an estimate of biological availability of inorganic Cu sources for chicks. Chicks were allotted randomly to dietary treatments that included an unsupplemented basal corn-soybean meal diet (11.1 mg/kg Cu, DM basis) or this basal diet supplemented with 150, 300 or 450 mg/kg Cu either as reagent-grade acetate or feed grade oxide, carbonate or sulfate. Chicks were housed in batteries… 
Estimation of the relative bioavailability of copper sources in chicks fed on conventional dietary amounts
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Copper sulfate is often added to broiler and laying hen diets at prophylactic dosages due to its antimicrobial and growth promoting effects despite reduced P digestibility, whereas P use from other
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The feed conversion data suggest that the antagonism between Zn and Cu occurred when the inorganic forms, but not organic forms, of these 2 minerals were included in a chick diet.
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TLDR
TBCC is a safer product and more available to broilers than Copper sulfate, and it is chemically less active than copper sulfate in promoting the oxidation of vitamin E in feed.
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