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Evaluation of Acid-Insoluble Ash as a Natural Marker in Ruminant Digestibility Studies1 ,2

J. Van Keulen, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1977 - 
- Vol. 44, Iss: 2, pp 282-287
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This article is published in Journal of Animal Science.The article was published on 1977-02-01. It has received 1499 citations till now.

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Effect of supplementation with rumen undegradable protein on milk production and ovarian activity in double purpose cows

TL;DR: It is concluded that supplementation with 45% RUP did not improve forage use or milk production, but had a positive effect on the restoration of ovarian activity in double purpose cows in early postpartum.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of chemical treatments of cereal grains on in vitro dry matter disappearance and steer feedlot performance

TL;DR: In four in vitro trials, the effectiveness of different chemical treatments in protecting cereal grains from ruminal degradation was studied as discussed by the authors, and the combination of aldehydes plus propionic acid was in a 3:1 ratio.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of partial replacement of barley with dietary fat sources on growth and feed conversion efficiency of growing bulls

TL;DR: No apparent difference was observed between treatments on carcass quality and palatability scores of the meat, but Oleic and stearic acids were increased for RSO and TS containing diets as compared to the control and CaSFA containing diets.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of ratios of non-fibre carbohydrates to rumen degradable protein in diets of Holstein cows: 1. Feed intake, digestibility and milk production

TL;DR: Results showed that low producing cows are less likely to respond to altering NFC : RDP ratios than high producing cows, but digestibility in the MRDP treatment was higher and RDP level equal to 108, which was useful and recommendable for mid-lactation dairy cow.

Effect of energy intake levels on digestibility, ruminal fermentation, blood metabolite and growth performance in Thai native cattle.

TL;DR: Investigating the effects of energy intake levels on digestibility, ruminal fermentation, blood metabolite and growth performance of Thai native cattle indicated that increased metabolizable energy intake improved growth performance without adversely affecting digestibility.