Grass, alfalfa, clover, and timothy are all used for livestock fodder.
Two main reasons: 1) Crops and livestock tend to be mutually beneficial. The crops feed the livestock, and the livestock waste feeds the crops. 2) The more diverse a farm is, the more protected the business is from changes in the market. If a farm only produces one or two crops, the farm is at much greater financial risk from a downturn in the market, whereas it is much less likely that four or more products will all be down in the market at the same time.
No
Comprise risk.
5
They comprise two integers.
Food crops are crops grown for human consumption such as vegetables and fruit. Fodder crops such as hay, corn, and sorghum are grown for livestock to eat.
Fodder crops are incredibly important to livestock, especially cattle. Feeding cattle and grazing them ultimately depends on the production of forage crops because these animals will not nor can not eat anything else. Cattle are herbivores and designed to eat plants that are impossible for us humans to eat, so in order for us to get beef and milk from these animals, we had--and have--to feed them according to what they can, will, and need to eat. Thus, no matter how or what cattle are fed, they all source from fodder crops.
Fodder industry, one that grows, makes and sells hay and silage for livestock.
beverage crops.
Yes. It is commonly used in fodder for livestock.
Fodder crops are crops grown for the purpose of being produced as animal feed. Fodder is also known as forage and is fed to animals in the form of straw, hay, silage, grain, greenfeed, baleage, compressed and pelleted feeds, oils and mixed rations, legumes, sprouted grains, grain by-product, animal by-product (especially with feeding hogs and poultry), cull vegetables and starches, etc. Certain crops like berseem, corn, sorghum, milo, wheat, oats, sudan grass, alfalfa, timothy, and grass-legume hay mixes are such used as a means to create fodder or animal feed for livestock.
Feed for livestock, especially coarsely chopped hay
Leguminous fodder crops include:CloverAlfalfaSanfoinBird's Foot TrefoilLaspadenzaCicer MilkvetchField PeasNon-Leguminous fodder crops include:TimothyOrchard grassCornBarleyTriticaleSmooth Brome GrassMeadow Brome GrassKentucky Blue GrassBlue Gamma GrassBermuda GrassBuffalo GrassRed Canary GrassJohnson GrassIt should be noted that all grasses even those not listed here are non-leguminous fodder crops.
Fodder as a noun for a coarse food for livestock; the raw material for something; or people who have no value and are expendable.Fodder as a verb is the act of feeding fodder to livestock.Example sentence:The slightest mishap by a celebrity is always fodder for the paparazzi.
What sort of crop are you referring to? With most crops, like barley or corn, all of it (except the roots) are used as livestock feed, because they can be cut up for silage or harvested for grain.
It means the soil doesn't have the nutrients or quality suitable to grow crops in. It can be too sandy or too rocky or too clayey. But, just because a soil is not fertile enough to grow crops with doesn't mean it's not good enough to be used to grow fodder, range or pasture for livestock to graze.
Fodder, a type of animal feed, is any agricultural foodstuff used specifically to feed domesticated livestock, such as cattle, goats, sheep, horses, chickens and pigs.