Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-2xdlg Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-15T03:53:07.407Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The composition and nutritive value of marrow stem kale and thousand head kale

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

H. E. Woodman
Affiliation:
(School of Agriculture, Cambridge)
R. E. Evans
Affiliation:
(School of Agriculture, Cambridge)
A. Eden
Affiliation:
(School of Agriculture, Cambridge)

Extract

The paper records the results of an investigation into the composition, digestibility and nutritive value of marrow stem kale (both unthinned and singled-out) and thousand head kale. A number of the main findings are recorded below.

The average dry-matter content of unthinned marrow stem kale during September and October was 13·3 per cent. During the following January it had reached a slightly higher level, namely, 14·2 per cent. Singling out of the marrow stem kale appeared to exercise little effect on the dry-matter content of the crop. Thousand head kale, with an average dry-matter content of 15·8 per cent., is significantly richer in dry matter than the marrow stem kale, although this advantage was offset by the lower yield, in terms of green matter, given per acre by the thousand head kale.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1936

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

(1), Wood. J. Minist. Agric. (1927), p. 697.Google Scholar
(2), Woodand , Woodman. Butt. Minist. Agric., Lond. (1933), No. 48.Google Scholar
(3), Woodman. Bull. Minist. Agric., Lond. (1933), No. 13.Google Scholar
(4), Russell. Farmer and Stockbreeder (Feb. 1935).Google Scholar
(5), Crowther. J.R. agric. Soc. (1933), 94, 141.Google Scholar
(6), Crowther. J.R. agric. Soc. (1934), 95, 165.Google Scholar
(7), Edinet al. Central Exp. Sta. Rep. (1933), p. 433.Google Scholar
(8), Büngeret al. Tierernährung (1933), 5, 450.Google Scholar
(9), Schmidtet al. Tierernährung (1933), 5, 305.Google Scholar
(10), Wohlbier. Biederm. Zbl. A 4, 321.Google Scholar
(11), Ingle. Manual of Agricultural Chemistry (1920), p. 267.Google Scholar
(12), Woodman and , Underwood. J. agric. Sci. (1932), 22, 26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(13), Evans. J. agric. Sci. (1931), 21, 806.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(14), Woodman, , Evans and , Norman. J. agric. Sci. (1933), 23, 419.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(15), Woodman. J. agric. Sci. (1922), 12, 144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(16), Woodman, , Evans and , Norman. J. agric. Sci. (1934), 24, 283.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(17), Kellner. Scientific Feeding of Animals (trans. by Goodwin, ) (1926).Google Scholar
(18), Woodman and , Bee. J. agric. Sci. (1927), 17, 477.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(19), Woodman, , Norman and , French. J. agric. Sci. (1931), 21, 267.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(20), Wood and , Woodman. J. agric. Sci. (1921), 11, 304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(21), Woodmanand , Amos. J. agric. Sci. (1928), 18, 194.CrossRefGoogle Scholar