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The effects of undecorticated cotton cake added to a grass diet fed to sheep
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 1962
Extract
Results are given from two digestibility trials in which the following three diets were fed to sheep: (i) grass only, (ii) grass+5 oz. cotton cake daily, (iii) grass+10 oz. cotton cake daily.
In the first trial the average dry-matter content of the grass was low (approx. 14%), intake was low and the supplements were eaten in addition to the grass. In the second trial where the dry-matter content (approx. 20%) of the grass and the intake were higher, the cake supplements reduced herbage consumption.
The feeding of cake did not have any significant effect on the dry-matter percentage in the faeces but depressed the digestibility of the dry matter, crude protein, crude fibre and nitrogen-free extract in the diets including cake and reduced their starch equivalent and total digestible nutrient values.
No evidence was found to support the recommendation that undecorti-cated cotton cake should be fed to grazing animals.
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- Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1962
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