1955
DOI: 10.1002/jsfa.2740060502
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The value of certain agricultural, marine and industrial products and by‐products in livestock feeding. II. —Non‐ruminants

Abstract: FEW new energy sources have proved to be worth exploiting for the feeding of non-ruminants.Cereals and root crops remain the main sources of energy, with fibrous materials, whether in their native or processed state, playing a very small part. However, American feeders have recently begun to use low-grade fats, inedible by man, in poultry feeding.With protein concentrates more attention is being given to improving the methods of processing to obtain materials of higher nutritive value than to developing new pr… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…These corresponded generally to the findings of other workers for the better commercial meals, made from either white or 'oily' fish (cf. review by Duckworth, 1955), and the figures obtained here for the two white-fish meal samples (H and I) are of the same order. It is clear also that the value of fish meals prepared less carefully can be much lower, but our first interest was to obtain an estimate of how far the best commercial product still fell short of an 'ideal' material in G.P.V.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 69%
“…These corresponded generally to the findings of other workers for the better commercial meals, made from either white or 'oily' fish (cf. review by Duckworth, 1955), and the figures obtained here for the two white-fish meal samples (H and I) are of the same order. It is clear also that the value of fish meals prepared less carefully can be much lower, but our first interest was to obtain an estimate of how far the best commercial product still fell short of an 'ideal' material in G.P.V.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 69%
“…On the average, however, the G.P.Vs. of the prepress-solvent and solvent processed rapeseed meals were close to that of soybean meal (Duckworth, 1955). …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…There is the further possibility that at least some of the observed differences between the supplements containing buttermilk and those containing meat meal were due to the protein of the meat meal being of relatively low nutritive value. Work reviewed by Duckworth (1955) has revealed considerable variation between different samples of meat meals in this respect.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%