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For example, using UK government Livestock Units (LUs) from the 2003 scheme [1] a particular 10 ha (25-acre) pasture field might be able to support 15 adult cattle or 25 horses or 100 sheep: in that scheme each of these would be regarded as being 15 LUs, or 1.5 LUs per hectare (about 0.6 LUs per acre).
[18] [1] The horse's pulling power is limited, but still considerable in relation to its size and weight. [19] These horses are also used to work cattle and guard sheep herds. [8] They are also slaughtered for their meat, [4] [8] a purpose that mainly concerns the massive type of the breed, [10] as the meat yield of Adais is generally low. [11]
Cattle feedlot in Colorado, United States. Animal husbandry is the branch of agriculture concerned with animals that are raised for meat, fibre, milk, or other products.It includes day-to-day care, management, production, nutrition, selective breeding, and the raising of livestock.
Effectively, the regulation assigns animal unit equivalents of 1 for a cow (either by herself or with an unweaned calf), 0.7 for a yearling of the genus Bos, 1.5 for a bull, 1.25 for a horse, 0.2 for a sheep, 0.2 for a llama, and 0.1 for an alpaca. [2]
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Meat, milk and fleece. Goat: Bezoar ibex: Greece and Pakistan Meat, milk and fleece Reindeer: Reindeer: Eurasia Draught, milk, flesh and hide Bactrian camel: Wild Bactrian camel: Central Asia Riding, racing, meat, milk and fur Arabian camel: Thomas' camel North Africa and SW Asia Riding, racing, meat and milk Llama: Guanaco: Andes Pack animals ...
The notion of "meat horse" is a French specificity: [1] this term designates a livestock animal, the horse raised for the production of meat.Rural historian Marcel Mavré analyzes it as a degradation of the draft horse, the meat horse being a direct descendant of the draft horse, which is a working animal. [2]
[36] [37] When looking at meat only, ruminants consume an average of 2.8 kg of human edible feed per kg of meat produced, while monogastrics need 3.2 kg. [36] [37] Finally, when accounting for the protein content of the feed, ruminant need an average of 0.6 kg of edible plant protein to produce 1 kg of animal protein while monogastric need 2 kg.