Grazing behaviour of the goat

Goats show a marked preference for young herbs when available but tend to eat more browse than sheep or cattle at most times and particularly when the nutritional plane is low. Goats are thus not obligate browsers and are more selective among shrub than among herbage species. When given a choice goats usually choose significantly different diets than do sheep and cattle and this is more important than differences in digestive abilities for range animals. Goats tend to be better digesters of fibre and have a better nitrogen balance than other stock, which may be of importance to animals with restricted diets. Goats have characteristic foraging behaviours which take them into different environments from sheep and cattle and they tend to avoid heat and cold stress. These differences make goats complementary to cattle and sheep in that greater secondary productivity can often be obtained by running goats as well as sheep and/or cattle, but this advantage is difficult to quantify and the different value of the products from the three species means that decisions are usually made on economic rather than gross productivity grounds. Angora goats produce fibre of higher value than that of sheep but there are not suited to all environments. Behaviour of feral goats in Australia is described in relation to the value and management

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 76193 Harrington, G.N., 6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA), 33022 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Scottsdale, AZ (EUA) 1982
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spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:117562020-02-03T20:30:37ZGrazing behaviour of the goatProceedings 76193 Harrington, G.N. 6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA) 33022 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982 textScottsdale, AZ (EUA)1982engGoats show a marked preference for young herbs when available but tend to eat more browse than sheep or cattle at most times and particularly when the nutritional plane is low. Goats are thus not obligate browsers and are more selective among shrub than among herbage species. When given a choice goats usually choose significantly different diets than do sheep and cattle and this is more important than differences in digestive abilities for range animals. Goats tend to be better digesters of fibre and have a better nitrogen balance than other stock, which may be of importance to animals with restricted diets. Goats have characteristic foraging behaviours which take them into different environments from sheep and cattle and they tend to avoid heat and cold stress. These differences make goats complementary to cattle and sheep in that greater secondary productivity can often be obtained by running goats as well as sheep and/or cattle, but this advantage is difficult to quantify and the different value of the products from the three species means that decisions are usually made on economic rather than gross productivity grounds. Angora goats produce fibre of higher value than that of sheep but there are not suited to all environments. Behaviour of feral goats in Australia is described in relation to the value and managementGoats show a marked preference for young herbs when available but tend to eat more browse than sheep or cattle at most times and particularly when the nutritional plane is low. Goats are thus not obligate browsers and are more selective among shrub than among herbage species. When given a choice goats usually choose significantly different diets than do sheep and cattle and this is more important than differences in digestive abilities for range animals. Goats tend to be better digesters of fibre and have a better nitrogen balance than other stock, which may be of importance to animals with restricted diets. Goats have characteristic foraging behaviours which take them into different environments from sheep and cattle and they tend to avoid heat and cold stress. These differences make goats complementary to cattle and sheep in that greater secondary productivity can often be obtained by running goats as well as sheep and/or cattle, but this advantage is difficult to quantify and the different value of the products from the three species means that decisions are usually made on economic rather than gross productivity grounds. Angora goats produce fibre of higher value than that of sheep but there are not suited to all environments. Behaviour of feral goats in Australia is described in relation to the value and managementURN:ISBN:0-930848-17-9
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
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libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
language eng
description Goats show a marked preference for young herbs when available but tend to eat more browse than sheep or cattle at most times and particularly when the nutritional plane is low. Goats are thus not obligate browsers and are more selective among shrub than among herbage species. When given a choice goats usually choose significantly different diets than do sheep and cattle and this is more important than differences in digestive abilities for range animals. Goats tend to be better digesters of fibre and have a better nitrogen balance than other stock, which may be of importance to animals with restricted diets. Goats have characteristic foraging behaviours which take them into different environments from sheep and cattle and they tend to avoid heat and cold stress. These differences make goats complementary to cattle and sheep in that greater secondary productivity can often be obtained by running goats as well as sheep and/or cattle, but this advantage is difficult to quantify and the different value of the products from the three species means that decisions are usually made on economic rather than gross productivity grounds. Angora goats produce fibre of higher value than that of sheep but there are not suited to all environments. Behaviour of feral goats in Australia is described in relation to the value and management
format Texto
author 76193 Harrington, G.N.
6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
33022 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
spellingShingle 76193 Harrington, G.N.
6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
33022 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
Grazing behaviour of the goat
author_facet 76193 Harrington, G.N.
6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
33022 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
author_sort 76193 Harrington, G.N.
title Grazing behaviour of the goat
title_short Grazing behaviour of the goat
title_full Grazing behaviour of the goat
title_fullStr Grazing behaviour of the goat
title_full_unstemmed Grazing behaviour of the goat
title_sort grazing behaviour of the goat
publisher Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
publishDate 1982
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AT 76193harringtongn proceedings
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