M
Michel Doreau
Researcher at University of Auvergne
Publications - 199
Citations - 12280
Michel Doreau is an academic researcher from University of Auvergne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rumen & Silage. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 199 publications receiving 11268 citations. Previous affiliations of Michel Doreau include University of Lyon & Institut national de la recherche agronomique.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The French horse feed evaluation systems and recommended allowances for energy and protein
TL;DR: New energy and protein systems were conceived and introduced in France by INRA for horse feed evaluation and recommended allowances and the nutritive value of feeds can be predicted either from set of tables or from the chemical composition of feeds by using relationships established byINRA.
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Best available technology for European livestock farms: Availability, effectiveness and uptake.
L. Loyon,C. H. Burton,Tom Misselbrook,J. Webb,F. X. Philippe,M. Aguilar,Michel Doreau,Melynda Hassouna,Tom Veldkamp,J. Y. Dourmad,A. Bonmati,E. Grimm,Sven G. Sommer +12 more
TL;DR: Evaluation of the existing and new BAT technologies is a key to a successful abatement of pollution from the sector and this in turn relies heavily on good measurement strategies, which are essential for the development of a valid strategy.
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Ruminal lipid balance and intestinal digestion by dairy cows fed calcium salts of rapeseed oil fatty acids or rapeseed oil.
TL;DR: The addition of fat, regardless of origin, affected small intestinal digestibilities of C14:0 and C18:2(n-6) and did not affect changes in the amount of FA in the hindgut, suggesting catabolism of FA by ruminal microbes.
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Additive methane-mitigating effect between linseed oil and nitrate fed to cattle.
Jessie Guyader,Maguy Eugène,Bruno Meunier,Michel Doreau,Diego P. Morgavi,Mathieu Silberberg,Y. Rochette,C. Gérard,C. Loncke,Christine Martin +9 more
TL;DR: An additive effect between nitrate and linseed oil for reducing methanogenesis in cows without altering diet digestibility is demonstrated, suggesting that nitrate does not act only as an electron acceptor.
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Effects of type of ration and allocation methods on the environmental impacts of beef-production systems
Thi Tuyet Hanh Nguyen,H.M.G. van der Werf,H.M.G. van der Werf,Maguy Eugène,P. Veysset,J. Devun,Guillaume Chesneau,Michel Doreau +7 more
TL;DR: Comparison of several allocation methods revealed that allocation method strongly affected the impacts per kg of carcass mass of the breeding bull and finished cull cows and, to a much lesser extent, those of fattened bulls and finished heifers.