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Feed conversion ratio (FCR): Calculated weekly as kilogram feed intake/kilogram gain of body weight. .
Feed conversion ratio (FCR): Calculated weekly as kilogram feed intake/kilogram gain of body weight.
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Crickets need only 1.7 kilograms of feed to gain a kilogram of body weight; a typical U.S. chicken consumes 2.5 kilograms, pigs 5 kilograms, and cattle 10 kilograms.
Lipid oxidation in frozen bacon was successfully reduced when bacon was manufactured from pigs fed a diet supplemented with or without 200 mg of α-tocopherol per kilogram of feed and processed with a combination of liquid and wood smoke.
A cow needs up to ten kilograms of feed to produce one kilogram of meat.
Cattle and poultry are poor at converting food to body weight, but crickets, says the report, need just two kilograms of feed for every one kilogram of weight gained.
They produce much more meat per kilogram of feed than the more usual farmed animals do, and more of their body mass is edible.
The simulated power consumption for pre-cooling the hydrogen from 25 °C to −198 °C with this new MR cycle was 2.07 kWh/kgGH2 from the ideal minimum of 0.7755 kWh per kilogram of feed hydrogen gas.
We carried out DEHP exposure in wild-type (WT) mice using C57Bl6J mice (Charles River, L'Arbresle, France), which were fed a chow diet (CD) or a high-fat diet (HFD) containing 60% fat (Provimi-Kliba, Kaiseraugst, Switzerland), supplemented with 10 mL sunflower oil (vehicle) per kilogram of feed in the presence or absence of DEHP (Sigma Aldrich, Buchs, Switzerland).
While eight kilograms of feed are required to produce a kilogram of beef, it takes only two kilograms to get the same amount of edible insect.
One kilogram of mashed feed was mixed with 500-mL of the co-culture thoroughly.
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