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Participation in Forum on March 21, 2021
In unpublished work, Rebecca Abbot has shown that in carefully controlled feeding studies with wheat, substantial variation in starch digestibility occurs due to variable levels of hindgut ferementation, with energy recovery after reverse peristalsis to the terminal ileum. Social status also conditions starch utilisation, with dominant bird overeating and wasting energy in an attempt to sequester ...
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Article published the February 13, 2020
INTRODUCTIONSince World War II, food insecurity has been an issue concerning the world’s poorest, with the received wisdom being that such insecurity could be alleviated by eliminating local poverty (McLaren, 1974) and improving food distribution since, globally, food has historically been produced in excess of world population needs. However, future food and nutritional security has become ...
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Participation in Forum on February 12, 2020
Vegetable proteins may replace animal proteins in diet formulations, but the question is "Why?". See http://PeerJ.com/articles/2100/ for a full discussion of the efficiency of land use for meeting protein needs for humans: the same strictures apply to monogastrics. It is clear from that analysis that monogastrics feed humans their protein needs much less effectively than dairy from arable land. S ...
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Participation in Forum on December 5, 2019
Regrettably, intra-population variability is an intrinsic property of all living things, including both the sources of feed ingredients, and the responses of animals to blends of them. If the ultimate target of the nutritionist is to optimise performance while minimising variability in the animal populatioin at slaughter, understanding the causes of the variation in both ingredients and animal res ...
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November 29, 2015
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Location:Christchurch, Canterbury, New Zealand
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