Cattle Feed Formulation Software

5/27/2018by
Cattle Feed Formulation Software Rating: 5,7/10 8605reviews
Dairy Cattle Feed Formulation

Winfeed is the world first commercial level stochastic and linear feed or diet formulation software for poultry, sheep, cattle and horses. AFOS is new age cloud based feed formulation software.

Five Parts: We all like to believe that the entire concept of how to feed cattle is as simple as just putting some hay in front of them. Yet the unfortunate reality is that it involves so much more than that. We really need to inquire about what feed can be fed, what cattle are being fed, how much can be fed to those cattle, and how that feed is going to affect their health and productivity.

To make it that much more complicated, often several types feeds need to be supplied in order to meet the full nutritional needs of the animals. So much for just putting some hay in front of a cow! To meet the full nutritional needs of a herd of cattle involves some knowledge of ruminant nutrition and forage quality, as well as diet or ration formulation. Those inquiries mentioned above all need to be incorporated in order for a particular ration to be effective. This means assessing your cattle (what are their nutritional requirements?) and assessing the available feeds (what is the feed quality in terms of nutritional composition?) before compiling all that information together to come up with a ration worth its weight in animal productivity. In a nutshell, how to feed cattle means first assessing your cattle, assessing the available feeds, then come up with a ration suitable for your animals. This article is not going to provide a list of feeds to feed to your cattle, nor is it going to provide the answer to how you should go about providing such feeds to your animals.

Rather it is designed to help you gain an understanding and give you a boost in the right direction in order for you to make better nutritional management decisions for the betterment of your cattle. Lactating cows: Period of lactation (how long they have been producing milk), number of lactations (or how many times, per production cycle, has a cow produced milk in her life), how much milk she is production (in weight, not volume), pregnancy status (is she bred, and if so how far along), and expected birth weight. • Dry (non-lactating) cows: Generally whether a non-lactating cow is bred or not is of significant importance.

If she is bred, like with lactating cows, the question that comes is how many months is she pregnant. • Bred heifers: Same information is required as for dry cows. Cubase 5 Crack Mac Dongle.

Comments are closed.