Product Details
The Mineral Nutrition of Livestock

The Mineral Nutrition of Livestock
By E.J. Underwood, Neville Suttle

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Product Description

This new edition, published in its second edition in 1981, adheres to the framework laid down by the late Professor Underwood, but has been thoroughly revised by Neville Suttle. It begins with three chapters of general introduction on the physiological need for minerals, dietary sources of minerals and the principles governing detection of deficiencies. Several advances in the assessment of mineral availability are described and claims for enhanced availability for new chelated sources critically reviewed. The chapter on detection includes new physiological and biochemical definitions of the marginal band between a deficient and normal mineral status to improve the precision of diagnoses. In bringing the chapters on macro-minerals up-to-date, calcium and phosphorus are treated separately to acknowledge their distinctive metabolism outside the skeleton and new treatments, such as the use of acid diets for milk-fever, are described The contrasting features of phosphorus and magnesium nutrition in the ruminant and non-ruminant are drawn out and the unique need of the ruminant for elemental sulphur is stressed in a new chapter. With trace elements, a few chapters (eg. iron and mangane


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #937236 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-01-16
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 624 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"Suttle (Moredun Research Institute, Penicuik, England) here revises the late Underwood's 1980 update of his 1970 reference for veterinarians, animal scientists, and advanced students of nutrition. He begins with three general chapters on the physiological basis of mineral needs, dietary sources, and principles for detecting deficiencies. Calcium and phosphorus he now treats separately to acknowledge their distinctive metabolism outside the skeleton. He also details the contrasting features of phosphorus and magnesium nutrition in ruminants and non-ruminants, and includes a new chapter stressing the unique need of ruminants for elemental sulphur. Other changes are in the chapters on trace elements, new chapters on occasionally beneficial elements and essentially toxic elements, and the improved conduct and interpretation of supplementation trials."--SciTech Book News

From the Author
It will save farmers and vets time and money to get a copy
The value of this book is that it provides an objective view on a specialised subject, mineral nutrition,which impinges on animal welfare, profitability of livestock farming, precision of veterinary diagnoses and pollution of the environment. It does so at a time when the pool of scientific expertise on the subject is shrinking rapidly due to changing priorities in government spending. The vaccuum is being filled by commercially funded or linked research and publicity which exagerates the risks of mineral disorders to boost sales of mineral supplements. By adhering to the guidelines given on diagnosis of mineral disorders, vets can protect their clients from this exploitation and consumers from 'pollution' of their foods and environment.