The amount of chicken biomass that 5,000 kg of corn can support depends on various factors, including the nutritional content of the corn, the efficiency of feed conversion, and the growth conditions of the chickens. On average, chickens convert feed to body mass at a rate of about 2:1 to 3:1, meaning for every 2 to 3 kg of feed, they gain 1 kg of body weight. Using this estimate, 5,000 kg of corn could potentially support around 1,600 to 2,500 kg of chicken biomass, depending on the specific conditions and efficiency of the feed conversion.
Five gallons.
once your farm is paid for about 175,000.00 a year
It's a variant of popcorn from Argentina. It's sweet and does not look very much like pop-corn but essentially that's what it is.
The cylinder will support, at neutral buoyancy, as much weight as the weight of water it could contain, less the weight of the cylinder itself.
On average, it takes about 2 kg of corn to produce 1 kg of chicken meat. Therefore, 5000 kg of corn can support the production of approximately 2500 kg of chicken biomass.
The amount of chicken biomass that 5,000 kg of corn can support depends on various factors, including the nutritional content of the corn, the efficiency of feed conversion, and the growth conditions of the chickens. On average, chickens convert feed to body mass at a rate of about 2:1 to 3:1, meaning for every 2 to 3 kg of feed, they gain 1 kg of body weight. Using this estimate, 5,000 kg of corn could potentially support around 1,600 to 2,500 kg of chicken biomass, depending on the specific conditions and efficiency of the feed conversion.
Chicken.
400
400
500
2 000 kg
for a hen approximately £5:00 per year mostly for the corn or food for it
500
You would eat the chicken because it uses up energy and does n't transmit much energy into the chiken egg- so it is the most economical way :)
Yes, they can, but deer corn is whole kernel corn. It is much harder for the birew to digest in that form. It would be better to feed cracked corn, corn that has gone through at least one stage of a mill. Deer corn is usually fed to deer, cows and other large animals that will chew it to break it up. Chickens, of course, have no teeth, and if a chicken has a choice between whole kernel corn or cracked corn, it instinctively goes for the cracked corn.
My buff orpington hens, seven months old, will easily consume 2-3 large corn cobbs per day...