Proceedings

Botanical composition herded goat diets were determined by the micro-histological analysis of feces. The vegetation type is Bouteloue - Michrochloe - Lycurus grassland with Quercus trees and infested areas of Opuntia spp. Ten one-square-meter permanent plots were established near the goat pens for a systematic fecd sampling. Feces were collected monthly during a year (March 1980 - February 1981). Twenty-six plant categories were recognized with the fecal analysis. Three plant species comprised about 65 percent of the diet: Quercus leaves, Bouteloua grasses and a Malvaceae forb. Other important plants in the diet were Opuntia, Aristioa and Phoradendron. The peak of grass consumption (74 percent) occurred at the end of the summer season (September), and minor fluctuations were detected during the rest of the year (15-38 percent). Browse consumption, mostly Quercus leaves, was highest in June (57 percent) and lowest during September and October (4 percent). During the rest of the year diet components were quite heterogeneous. The data obtained could serve to understand, improve or modify goat grazing and management systems in areas of central Mexico with similar characteristics

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 71845 Giner, A., 104137 Pena, R.H. de, 98940 Neira, J.M.P., 6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA), 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
Format: biblioteca
Published: Scottsdale, AZ (EUA) 1982
Subjects:CAPRINOS, CONSUMO DE FORRAJES, COMPOSICION BOTANICA, MEXICO,
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spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:439362022-02-01T12:34:26ZProceedings 71845 Giner, A. 104137 Pena, R.H. de 98940 Neira, J.M.P. 6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA) 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982 Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)1982Botanical composition herded goat diets were determined by the micro-histological analysis of feces. The vegetation type is Bouteloue - Michrochloe - Lycurus grassland with Quercus trees and infested areas of Opuntia spp. Ten one-square-meter permanent plots were established near the goat pens for a systematic fecd sampling. Feces were collected monthly during a year (March 1980 - February 1981). Twenty-six plant categories were recognized with the fecal analysis. Three plant species comprised about 65 percent of the diet: Quercus leaves, Bouteloua grasses and a Malvaceae forb. Other important plants in the diet were Opuntia, Aristioa and Phoradendron. The peak of grass consumption (74 percent) occurred at the end of the summer season (September), and minor fluctuations were detected during the rest of the year (15-38 percent). Browse consumption, mostly Quercus leaves, was highest in June (57 percent) and lowest during September and October (4 percent). During the rest of the year diet components were quite heterogeneous. The data obtained could serve to understand, improve or modify goat grazing and management systems in areas of central Mexico with similar characteristicsBotanical composition herded goat diets were determined by the micro-histological analysis of feces. The vegetation type is Bouteloue - Michrochloe - Lycurus grassland with Quercus trees and infested areas of Opuntia spp. Ten one-square-meter permanent plots were established near the goat pens for a systematic fecd sampling. Feces were collected monthly during a year (March 1980 - February 1981). Twenty-six plant categories were recognized with the fecal analysis. Three plant species comprised about 65 percent of the diet: Quercus leaves, Bouteloua grasses and a Malvaceae forb. Other important plants in the diet were Opuntia, Aristioa and Phoradendron. The peak of grass consumption (74 percent) occurred at the end of the summer season (September), and minor fluctuations were detected during the rest of the year (15-38 percent). Browse consumption, mostly Quercus leaves, was highest in June (57 percent) and lowest during September and October (4 percent). During the rest of the year diet components were quite heterogeneous. The data obtained could serve to understand, improve or modify goat grazing and management systems in areas of central Mexico with similar characteristicsCAPRINOSCONSUMO DE FORRAJESCOMPOSICION BOTANICAMEXICOURN:ISBN:0930848179
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
Fisico
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
topic CAPRINOS
CONSUMO DE FORRAJES
COMPOSICION BOTANICA
MEXICO
CAPRINOS
CONSUMO DE FORRAJES
COMPOSICION BOTANICA
MEXICO
spellingShingle CAPRINOS
CONSUMO DE FORRAJES
COMPOSICION BOTANICA
MEXICO
CAPRINOS
CONSUMO DE FORRAJES
COMPOSICION BOTANICA
MEXICO
71845 Giner, A.
104137 Pena, R.H. de
98940 Neira, J.M.P.
6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
Proceedings
description Botanical composition herded goat diets were determined by the micro-histological analysis of feces. The vegetation type is Bouteloue - Michrochloe - Lycurus grassland with Quercus trees and infested areas of Opuntia spp. Ten one-square-meter permanent plots were established near the goat pens for a systematic fecd sampling. Feces were collected monthly during a year (March 1980 - February 1981). Twenty-six plant categories were recognized with the fecal analysis. Three plant species comprised about 65 percent of the diet: Quercus leaves, Bouteloua grasses and a Malvaceae forb. Other important plants in the diet were Opuntia, Aristioa and Phoradendron. The peak of grass consumption (74 percent) occurred at the end of the summer season (September), and minor fluctuations were detected during the rest of the year (15-38 percent). Browse consumption, mostly Quercus leaves, was highest in June (57 percent) and lowest during September and October (4 percent). During the rest of the year diet components were quite heterogeneous. The data obtained could serve to understand, improve or modify goat grazing and management systems in areas of central Mexico with similar characteristics
format
topic_facet CAPRINOS
CONSUMO DE FORRAJES
COMPOSICION BOTANICA
MEXICO
author 71845 Giner, A.
104137 Pena, R.H. de
98940 Neira, J.M.P.
6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
author_facet 71845 Giner, A.
104137 Pena, R.H. de
98940 Neira, J.M.P.
6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
author_sort 71845 Giner, A.
title Proceedings
title_short Proceedings
title_full Proceedings
title_fullStr Proceedings
title_full_unstemmed Proceedings
title_sort proceedings
publisher Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
publishDate 1982
work_keys_str_mv AT 71845ginera proceedings
AT 104137penarhde proceedings
AT 98940neirajmp proceedings
AT 6757dairygoatjournalpublishingcoscottsdaleazeua proceedings
AT 3internationalconferenceongoatproductionanddiseasetucsonazeua1015ene1982 proceedings
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