Sentences with phrase «ruminants produce»

Instead of a group of candle wax makers creating trans - fats in industrial vats by hydrogenating cottonseed oil into disgusting, technically edible faux - butter, the special digestive systems of grass - fed ruminants produce CLA internally.

Not exact matches

One widely cited study from 1995 estimated that ruminant animals (such as cows, sheep, and deer) can produce between 250 to 500 liters of methane a day because of how their digestive system works.
Beef and dairy cattle, and other milk - producing ruminants, provide food and nutrition to billions of people worldwide.
GREENER GAS Unlike ruminants, kangaroos produce low - methane farts and burps, and researchers are discovering how they do it.
Potent greenhouse gases, such as nitrogen oxides produced by denitrifying bacteria in overfertilized Chinese farming lands or methane released by archaea in the millions of ruminant animals in Australia and New Zealand, may have contributed substantially to global warming.
They are primarily produced by bacteria in animals with ruminant stomachs, like cows, goats, and sheep.
(6) This is because grain - based diets reduce the pH of the digestive system in ruminant animals, which inhibits the growth of the bacterium that produces CLA.
The stomachs of ruminant animals like cows and lamb produce this fat naturally, but unlike artificial hydrogenated fats, conjugated linoleic acid is very healthy.
That would be important because some experiments carried out on rats and mice are completely irrelevant to humans because of the significant physiological differences as the article above refers to: «Ruminant animals such as cows, sheep and goats have no trouble with phytic acid because phytase is produced by rumen microorganisms; monogastric animals also produce phytase, although far less.
I've enjoyed a long career in animal nutrition — first with Purina and later with Moorman's — throughout which I have been committed to producing outstanding nutritional products for a variety of species, including swine and ruminant animals, as well as family pets including dogs, cats and horses.
In a book, «Grass - Fed Cattle: How to Produce and Market Natural Beef,» the author Julius Ruechel theorized that soil was enriched as a result of the migration of giant herds of ruminants and other animals across the world's great plains.
This brief gives an overview of the enteric fermentation, which is a natural part of the digestive process of ruminants where microbes decompose and ferment feed present in the digestive tract to produce energy and protein along with methane.
Ruminants, which ferment plants in a specialized stomach before digestion, are estimated to be the largest single human - related source of methane, with greenhouse - gas emissions from sheep and cattle 19 to 48 times higher than beans or grains per pound of food produced, according to the report.
Methane is produced essentially irrelevant of man's work, coming from the natural degradation of organic matter and, especially, the gaseous emissions of the world's billions of wild and domesticated ruminants.
And while making wool requires little energy, it is associated with a lot of greenhouse gas emissions because sheep are ruminants (chew the cud) and thus produce methane.
Farmers won't produce more cellulose than their ruminants need unless there is a cellulose to ethanol plant buying.
Ruminants, like cows, produce methane as they digest their food, through a process known as enteric fermentation.
Ruminants digest through microbial, or «enteric» fermentation, which produces methane that is released by the animals through belching and, to a lesser degree, via flatulence.
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