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to ruminants
noun
An artiodactyl ungulate mammal which chews cud, such as a cow or deer.
Exact(60)
It's well documented that feeding high amounts of concentrate diet to ruminants results in subacute ruminal acidosis (SARA), a common metabolic disease especially occurred in high-producing animals.
Flaxseed is a potent source of the n-3 fatty acid α-linolenic acid (ALA), yet most ALA is lost during ruminal biohydrogenation when ground flaxseed is fed to ruminants.
This, however, will be banned from being fed to ruminants: cattle, sheep and goats.
But when they dissected its four stomachs (sperm whales, although predators, have digestive processes similar to ruminants), they found almost 100 plastic bags and other pieces of debris.
The F.D.A.'s rules against feeding ruminant protein to ruminants make exceptions for "blood products" (even though they contain protein) and fat.
Dr. Robert Wiese, director of animals at the Fort Worth Zoo, said most species broke off the mammal line that led to ruminants before horns evolved.
Further, all products that contain rendered cattle or sheep must have a label that says, "Do not feed to ruminants," Dr. Sundlof said.
George Bush's decision to shift a sizeable chunk of American corn production into biofuel will no doubt look to history as daft as feeding corn to ruminants.
It can be agreed that the camels evolved in North America and are as old as the tragulines, which in the Old World were ancestral to ruminants.
Therefore most of the oxalate-containing plants may cause poisoning to ruminants.
Perennial ryegrass is the principal component of diets fed to ruminants in New Zealand.
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