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Pelleted, treated feeds may boost digestion in growing cattle
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<blockquote data-quote="TexasBred" data-source="post: 1346343" data-attributes="member: 6897"><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p></p><p>It doesn't happen. Pelletizing may increas the rate of digestion since everything has a very small particle size but it doesn't nothing to increase digestion. And the risk of milk fever in beef cattle is very slim even when feeding DDG or CGF. Milk fever is actually caused by an overly high concentration of calcium in the blood prepartum, then the sudden release of all that calcium from the blood into milk production at the time of birth resulting in hypocalcaemia.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TexasBred, post: 1346343, member: 6897"] [b] [/b] It doesn't happen. Pelletizing may increas the rate of digestion since everything has a very small particle size but it doesn't nothing to increase digestion. And the risk of milk fever in beef cattle is very slim even when feeding DDG or CGF. Milk fever is actually caused by an overly high concentration of calcium in the blood prepartum, then the sudden release of all that calcium from the blood into milk production at the time of birth resulting in hypocalcaemia. [/QUOTE]
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Pelleted, treated feeds may boost digestion in growing cattle
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