This study first adopted a liquid microbial-enzymatic co-fermentation process to enhance the nutritional value of walnut meal (WM) and sesame meal (SM), and systematically evaluated its effect on the nutrient digestibility of growing pigs. WM and SM are two underutilized high-protein by-products, whose application is hindered by anti-nutritional tannin and fiber. Optimal fermentation parameters were determined via single-factor experiments and response surface methodology, utilizing a consortium of Lactobacillus I, Candida utilis, and protease. Fermentation significantly reduced tannin (39.41% in WM) and crude fibre (28.79% in WM), reduced tannin (18.67% in SM) and crude fibre (4.00% in SM), while elevating crude protein (10.63% in WM, 7.47% in SM) and acid-soluble protein in both WM and SM. Results of the microstructure of fermented WM and SM revealed structural loosening, surface porosity, and polysaccharide degradation. Microbial community shifts highlighted the dominance of Lactobacillus and Bacillus in fermented substrates. In growing pigs, fermented WM and SM exhibited improved standardized ileal digestibility (SID) of key amino acids (threonine, tryptophan, valine; p < 0.05), alongside enhanced digestible energy (DE) and metabolizable energy (ME) for SM (p < 0.05). These findings demonstrate that liquid co-fermentation effectively degrades anti-nutritional factors, enhances nutrient bio-availability, and positions WM and SM as viable alternatives to conventional protein sources in swine diets, supporting strategies to reduce reliance on soybean meal.
Wu et al. (Mon,) studied this question.