feedstuffs

Translations

feedstuffs

[ˈfiːdstʌfs] NPLpiensos mpl
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005
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Objectives of the study were therefore to quantify seasonal and spatial variations in the availability and nutritive value of tropical pasture herbage and supplement feedstuffs for grazing domestic ruminants in Western Kenya and to evaluate the need for local and season-specific solutions to improve livestock feeding.
Touting the important relationship and favorable business relations between Taiwan and the U.S., Isley was quoted by Feedstuffs.
Protein rich feedstuffs include blood meal, fish meal, meat and bone meal, oil seed meals (cotton seed meal, soya bean meal, sunflower meal, ground nut meal), maize germ, corn gluten meal, prosopis pods, beans, peas, insects and earthworms.Energy should constitute more than 75 per cent of the diet.
humans, swine, dogs, cats, and poultry) which digest only non-cellulolytic or low-cellulolytic feedstuffs in a single stomach through the action of enzymes and acids.
The energy content evaluation of feedstuffs used for pig diets is generally based on their digestible (DE) or metabolizable (ME) energy values.
Thus, finding and inclusion of unconventional local feedstuffs which have potential to be used as alternative to corn will reduce the production cost.
Among various feedstuffs analyzed in central and northeastern Iran, concentrate was maximally contaminated to both aflatoxigenic molds and [AFB.sub.1] [9, 10].
IN MERSEY | In the Mersey today, Cabrera, a bulk carrier carrying animal feedstuffs from the US; Boudicca, a cruise vessel sailing to Norway; Veendijk, a cargo vessel carrying steel coils from Turkey.
She said the legislation requires that feedstuffs and raw material for products using this term should come from mountain areas and, in the case of processed products, they 'should be produced in mountain areas'.
Eblex head of research and development Kim Matthews said: "Although the beef and sheep industry in Great Britain uses only a small amount of soya, we are continually looking at ways to reduce reliance on imported feedstuffs as part of the drive to improve the overall sustainability of the sector.