A method for pelleting small amounts of purified diets
- 1 April 1969
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Agricultural Science
- Vol. 72 (2) , 325-326
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600022255
Abstract
Purified diets prepared from finely ground constituents such as starch, casein, gelatine, cellulose, etc., are not readily acceptable by poultry. This is probably due to their powdery nature, for Coates, Kon & Shepheard (1950) found that chicks grew faster when fed a granulated purified diet than when this was fed unprocessed. Granulation was accomplished by mixing the diet with about a third of its weight of water, pressing the resulting paste through a no. 8 sieve and drying the granules at 40 °C.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The nutritive value of fish meal, meat‐and‐bone meal and field bean meal as measured by digestibility experiments on the adult colostomised fowlBritish Poultry Science, 1969
- Determination of alcohol in blood and urineThe Analyst, 1954
- The Use of Chicks for the Biological Assay of Members of the Vitamin B ComplexBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1950