The Ring-necked Duck forages by diving, but is usually found in shallow water and forages and dabbles at the surface as well. |
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The Black-footed Albatross forages while swimming, dabbling like a duck to reach food near the surface of the water. |
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High nitrate levels persist when forages are cut for hay, but ensiling the crop reduces nitrates by one-half. |
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Soil insect pests are generally more of a problem on corn and soybeans than on small grains and forages. |
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To optimize nutrient intake from the supplements, choose forages or concentrate mixtures that allow rapid rates of intake. |
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The summer growing season of kenaf corresponds with low quality forages deficient in protein in the Southeast. |
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Rotating corn with forages on minesoils is encouraged because soil tilth rapidly improves with forage cover. |
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Historically, when forages were part of the rotation, crop rotations positively affected nutrient release and improved tilth. |
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Agricultural Research Service agronomist Melanie Newman is the curator for finger millet and other warm-season cereals, forages, and turfgrasses. |
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A moonrat, a member of the hedgehog family, forages for food among leaf litter. |
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The nutritive value of timothy, however, was superior to other forages at the more mature stage. |
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The white-collared mangabey forages in small groups that split off from the larger main group. |
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Therefore, it was impossible to replace the heifers because of the lack of grazing forages. |
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The quality of alfalfa and corn silage, two primary dairy cattle forages, has increased, providing more energy for milk production. |
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The leopard shark forages in the kelp forest, in the surf zone, and in shallow embayments and estuaries. |
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The conclusions of Moore and Hatfield are based on data from forages rather than from grain hulls. |
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This approach is used for forages and also for feed materials originating from the manufacture of human food. |
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Maize silage and whole crop cereals are two such alternative forages. |
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The value of the crop for cattle feed if grazed, hayed or ensiled depends on yield, the price of alternative forages, and cost of utilization as forage. |
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Older artists cultivated by an ultraconservative Arts Council, viewed these forages into community art and politics as a contamination of the artistic canon. |
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This has resulted in producers being unable to reseed their forages or cut available forage crops. |
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The land area includes forest, pasture, cultivated forages, a stream, shelterbelts in progress and land cultivated annually for research. |
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As the crop residues decrease, the swans move on to more abundant perennial forages and winter cereal crops. |
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This shy creature forages most actively from dusk to dawn, sheltering during the day in burrows dug into stream banks. |
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A diet high in forages also aids in maintaining the rumen pH by increasing rumen motility and encouraging rumination. |
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This resulted in excellent planting conditions however because of a lack of moisture spring planted forages took a very long time to establish. |
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As the sun was setting, we made our way back, along a highway furrowed by hippos during their nocturnal forages. |
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Once a diurnal mammal, the dugong is now nocturnal as it forages for food. |
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Fiber in forages is usually inversely related to digestibility. |
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He is a young Berlin-based artist who forages among film stills and documentary photographs, making paintings and charcoal drawings after the images he finds. |
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For forages, bromegrass was consistently the hardiest and provided good hay and pasture. |
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Nevertheless, it appears that sporadic voyages to Markland for forages, timber, and trade with the locals could have lasted as long as 400 years. |
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Do not treat wheat underseeded to forages. |
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Composts may also provide N to perennial forages during early spring and fall, when soil conditions can limit fertilizer application in many regions. |
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By coming together under one banner, we can elevate the profile of forages in Alberta and bring attention to the need for expanded research and extension. |
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Their stated needs for improving soil fertility and crop rotations may be grounded, however, in the increasingly uncommon connection between forages and ruminants on organic farms. |
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It forages in swamps, ricefields and farmlands, and is mainly crepuscular. |
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In northern areas, the wood bison fed on a wide variety of grasses and wild forages, but mainly on meadow sedge, an abundant lowland forage, or food suitable for livestock. |
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Holos covers various conservation practices such as zero tillage, rotations with perennial forages, shelterbelts and riparian buffers, says Glen Shaw, SCCC executive director. |
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We saw near the bamboo forest some Pteropus seychellensis comorensis, a native fruit bat that usually roosts in groups but forages for fruits individually. |
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In their midst a portly curlew forages, probing the mud several times before plunging its slender down-curved bill in up to the hilt and winkling out a lugworm. |
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For example, some forages such as sainfoin negatively affected parasite species living in the small intestine of sheep but not those in the stomach. |
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A flock of pigeons forages beneath beech on the shady side of this valley and, in the meadow by Boar's Bridge, every umbel, frond and stem is coated in ice, even the alders growing on the edge by Morden Farm. |
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This being said, it is also true that increases in production efficiency would certainly be a boon for cattle feeding on crop residues and poor forages in arid and agriculturally poor areas of the world. |
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He says there will certainly be no shortage of forages this winter. |
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A great deal of information has been presented over the past few years about creating grazing systems with certain forages to be used at a specific time. |
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In a cow preference study, cows grazed soybean for a significantly greater time than alternative forages such as cowpeas and lablab. |
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Wheat has a substitutional relation with corns if both are used as forages. |
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Field pea is one of forages that is difficult to ensilage and silage additives must be used during ensilage. |
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However, with the onset of dry season, the conventional green forages wither, lignifies and at times may not be available due to bush burning. |
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A garbologist forages through waste paper baskets in search of interesting documents. |
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The bird catches food off the surface or by pursuit diving, and forages alone or in small flocks. |
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It sometimes forages away from water in pasture, and it has been recorded in desert areas, hunting for beetles and lizards. |
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The African pouched rat forages on the surface, gathering anything that might be edible into its capacious cheek pouches until its face bulges out sideways. |
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Maize silage is one of the most valuable forages for ruminants. |
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Transfer of monoterpenes and sesquiterpenes from forages into milk fat. |
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An egg-laying monotreme, the platypus is found in the fresh water lakes and streams of eastern Australia where it forages for prey with a highly sensitive bird-like bill. |
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The Large Mason Bee is Britain's rarest solitary bee and is found only at two sites where it forages nectar from horseshoe vetch, bramble and bugle. |
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Furthermore, native cattle have higher heat tolerance, higher resistance to regional ectoparasitic diseases, and the ability to utilize low quality forages. |
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Forages are generally good sources of calcium and can be variable in phosphorus according to soil type and fertilization. |
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Forages the researchers are working with include native rangeland, winter wheat, Sudan grass, Old World bluestems, and wheatgrasses. |
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