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This specially curated collection features five reviews of current
and key research on crops as livestock feed. The first chapter
reviews the impact of feeding ruminants cereal grains on animal
physiology and health. The chapter explores the use of
starch-containing cereal grains as a feedstuff to improve animal
efficiency and performance, as well as to reduce the environmental
footprint of ruminant animal production. The second chapter
discusses key environmental trade-offs in the use of crops as
livestock feed. It reviews key elements in trade-off analysis and
explores opportunities for making better use of existing feed
resources and producing more feed biomass of higher fodder quality.
The third chapter reviews ways of optimising the use of barley for
animal feed, from production and breeding through to the
application of new technologies such as near infrared spectroscopy
and molecular markers. The fourth chapter reviews the use of
sorghum as an important source of fodder and forage. It reviews the
different types of sorghum used for forage and other applications,
and then provides a detailed discussion of the use of forage
sorghum as feed for ruminants. The final chapter discusses the use
of soybean meal (SBM) as an animal feed. It assesses the
nutritional content of SBM, as well dealing with its anti-nutritive
compounds in optimising its use.
This collection features four peer-reviewed literature reviews on
antibiotics in poultry production. The first chapter places the use
of antibiotics in poultry production in its historical context to
understand the benefits that antibiotics have conferred on animal
production to date. It considers past, present and future use of
antibiotics, focusing on the use of bacteriocins and
phytochemicals. The second chapter considers the benefits and
repercussions of the use of antibiotics in poultry production. It
details the emergence of antibiotic resistance, as well as the
potential risks to public health and sustainable farming associated
with antibiotic use. The third chapter reviews the identification
and use of prebiotics as a control measure against contamination of
poultry products. The chapter covers both traditional prebiotic
compounds such as fructooligosaccharides, and less conventional
sources such as guar gum. The final chapter presents the background
and current use of Competitive Exclusion (CE) as a preventative
measure against Salmonella infections in poultry, by administration
ofcultures of intestinal origin to day-old chickens.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
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