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Evaluation of food industry by-products as feed in semi-arid dairy farming systems: the case of Jordan

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors explored alternative dairy feeding systems under semi-arid conditions, using Jordan as an example, and evaluated them against three criteria: their nutritional value, their impact on the cost of milk production, and their GHG mitigation potential.
Abstract
Dairy feeding systems in many semi-arid countries are based on imported concentrates and forages. This has economic and ecological implications given the increase in global feed prices and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from land use change. This paper aims to explore alternative dairy feeding systems under semi-arid conditions, using Jordan as an example. The feedings systems under investigation vary in their share of food industry by-products (replacing concentrates in the diet) and are compared against the current concentrate-based feeding systems. The systems are evaluated against three criteria: their nutritional value, their impact on the cost of milk production, and their GHG mitigation potential. Feed samples from eleven food industry by-products and ten conventional feeds were collected from food factories and from three typical dairy farms, representing the typical large-, medium- and small-scale farm types, respectively. Feed samples were analysed for their chemical composition and metabolisable energy contents. In addition, economic and production farm data were collected and entered into a model for GHGs calculation and economic evaluation. The results suggest that inclusion of locally available food industry by-products in the rations of milk cows in semi-arid production systems can be instrumental in reducing production costs and mitigating GHG emissions. Cost of milk production in the model farms can be lowered by up to 14 %; mitigation of CO2 eq. emission ranged between 70 and 290 g CO2 eq./kg milk. The degree to which these benefits can be reaped is positively related to the level of inclusion of by-product feeds in lactating cows’ diets.

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Techno-economic evaluation of biogas production from food waste via anaerobic digestion.

TL;DR: A techno-economic study is carried out on the potential of biogas production from different types of food waste generated locally and polynomial models were used to predict the production of total gas and methane during the fermentation periods, which showed good matching between the theoretical and practical values.
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Towards sustainable animal diets: A survey-based study☆

TL;DR: In this article, a concept has been developed of sustainable animal diets (StAnD), integrating the importance of protecting the environment, efficient use of natural resources, socio-cultural benefits, and ethical integrity and sensitivity, in addition to currently recognized nutrition-based criteria in producing safe and economically viable feed.
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TL;DR: Approaches for addressing challenges for making livestock sector more sustainable, including climate change, land degradation and water shortage, and the use of novel human-inedible feed resources based on their requirements for healthy living are presented.
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Smart livestock feeding strategies for harvesting triple gain - the desired outcomes in planet, people and profit dimensions: a developing country perspective

TL;DR: In this article, a series of promising innovations and practices in feed production and feeding including balanced and phased feeding, increase in the quality and level of use of forages in diets, reduction in use of grains; harvesting forages when nutrient availability per unit of land is maximum; targeted mineral feeding; reduction in feed losses; use of straw-based densified feed blocks; better recycling of human food wastes and human-inedible food components to feed; new business models for production and use of ureaammoniated straws, urea-molasses blocks, forages and sil
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Time series livestock diet optimization: cost-effective broiler feed substitution using the commodity price spread approach

TL;DR: In this article, a multi-stage linear programming (LP) feed model was developed for broiler feed and the impact of feed input price spread (variation) on the composition of broiler diets was analyzed.
References
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Climate change 2007: the physical science basis

TL;DR: The first volume of the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report as mentioned in this paper was published in 2007 and covers several topics including the extensive range of observations now available for the atmosphere and surface, changes in sea level, assesses the paleoclimatic perspective, climate change causes both natural and anthropogenic, and climate models for projections of global climate.
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Methods for dietary fiber, neutral detergent fiber, and nonstarch polysaccharides in relation to animal nutrition.

TL;DR: In addition to NDF, new improved methods for total dietary fiber and nonstarch polysaccharides including pectin and beta-glucans now are available and are also of interest in rumen fermentation.
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