This is the term for the water an animal gets from its solid food.
The primary functions of carbohydrates in an animal's diet.
What is to provide energy?
The fundamental "building blocks" that link together to form proteins.
What are Amino acids?
The two categories of vitamins
What is fat-soluble and water-soluble?
Chicken feed includes eggshells as a source for.
What is calcium?
The primary way a healthy, non-heat stressed animal loses water from its body.
What is urine?
Lipids provide this many times more energy per gram than carbohydrates.
What is 2.25?
A protein building block that an animal cannot produce itself and must get from the diet.
What is an essential amino acid?
Minerals are often fed
What is free choice?
The feedstuff that causes a protein toxicity in pigs.
What is cottonseed meal?
The ratio of water to feed.
What is 3:1?
The main structural carbohydrate in plant cell walls, often called fiber.
What is cellulose?
What is 15-16%?
Calcium is a type of.
What is macromineral?
Iron is a type of
What is trace mineral?
The approximate percentage of an adult animal's body that is composed of water.
What is 50-80%?
What is cereal grains, forages, and fiber?
The number of non-essential amino acids.
What is 10?
The number of B vitamins.
What is 10?
What is a feedstuff?
The 4 signs of dehydration in animals.
What is lethargy, sunken eyes, dry mucous membranes, decreased feed intake?
The technical names of simple carbohydrates and complex carbohydrates.
What is monosaccharides and disacchardies?
Name the 10 essential amino acids.
What is Arginine, Histidine, Isoleucine, Leucine, Lysine, Methionine, Phenylalanine, Threonine, Tryptophan, Valine?
This blood clotting vitamin is fat-soluble.
What is Vitamin K?
Crude Protein is calculated by measuring the amount of this element and multiplying it by 6.25
What is nitrogen?