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The nutritive and manurial values of sugar beet tops

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

H. E. Woodman
Affiliation:
(School of Agriculture, Cambridge University.)
J. W. Bee
Affiliation:
(School of Agriculture, Cambridge University.)

Extract

The heavy yields of sugar beet tops which remain on the land after the removal of the sugar beet crop may be utilised in two ways. They may either be ploughed into the land as manure, or they may be fed to stock. Where large areas of sugar beet are grown, and where in consequence it may not be possible to secure consumption of the whole of the tops before decomposition of the material sets in, a combination of these two methods of utilisation may be resorted to. In other words, the feeding of the tops may be continued so long as they remain wholesome, after which the remainder may be ploughed into the land.

In view of the present importance of the sugar beet crop in English agriculture, and the urgent necessity of making the fullest possible use of all the various by-products arising in connection with this crop both in the field and in the factory, it is of importance that data should be available relating to the value of sugar beet tops both as a feeding stuff and as a manure. The purpose of the present communication is to detail the results of investigations which have been carried out with a view to securing such information.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1927

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References

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