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Transactions of RHASS Volume 1940 - Page 015

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Year 1940
Transcription
OCR Text L 43
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18 STOCK-FEEDING UNDER WAR CONDITIONS.
The amounts of by-products from imported cereals (e.g., maize
gluten feed, maize germ meal, and distillery grains from
imported maize and barley) are of rather minor importance.
On the other hand, large quantities of oil-seeds are imported
primarily as sources of oil for the manufacture of soap,
margarine, &c. ; the oil-cakes represent a by-product. With
the increased demand for some of the oils, it may be expected
that oil-seed imports will be fairly well maintained, and that
cakes will continue to be available in considerable quantity.
The problem of making do with smaller imports may be
attacked from three directions. Firstly, we must try to make
fuller use, in feeding, of the produce of our farms ; secondly,
we must try to increase our acreage of the more productive
crops; and thirdly, if and when we are obliged to reduce
the number of mouths, we must try to do so upon some
carefully thought—out plan.
On all these aspects of the problem there are certain useful
lessons to be learnt from Germany, where, as is well known,
the most strenuous efforts have been made, over a period of
several years, to reduce that country’s dependence upon
imports.
THE UTILISATION 0F STRAW.
One of the few materials that will be available during
war in largely increased quantities is straw, and it seems
that many farmers will have larger quantities available than
can be put to good use for ordinary purposes—116., as litter
or as fodder for cattle. It has been shown, both in Germany
and in this country, that the nutritive value of straw can be
increased, and its possible uses multiplied, if it is put through
a simple and comparatively inexpensive process.
Straw consists mainly of cellulose, a substance with the
same general composition as starch, and having the same
gross energy value or heat-producing power. In so far as it
is digested by the animal, it has about the same food value
as starch, but its digestibility is very variable. On the one
hand animals with simple digestive apparatus (such as pigs
and poultry) pass out in their dung a large proportion of the
cellulose (fibre) of their food, whereas cattle, sheep, and
horses can digest certain forms of cellulose very well. A
further important point in relation to its digestibility is the
form in which the cellulose occurs in the plant. All plant
cells are enclosed in a wall of cellulose which, at first, is thin
and soft, and hence easy to break down. In parts of the
plant where strengthening tissue is not required—0.9., in a
turnip or a sugar-beet—-the bulk of the cells remain in this
condition. In a tree, on the other hand, the cell walls quickly
thicken and lignify (turn into a woody type of cellulose),
and become very indigestible. The point may be illustrated
STOCK-FEEDING UNDER WAR CONDITIONS. 19
by comparing beet pulp with sawdust. Both consist largely
of cellulose, but whereas the one is a valuable food for cattle
and sheep the other is useless, or actually worse than useless,.
as a food for any animal.
In ordinary cereal straw the cellulose is artl of the one
kind and partly of the other, the degree of ligfiificaiion showing
a good deal of variation. In wheat and rye the process 0“oes
far, and the straw of these crops isof low digestibilityf In
barley and especially in cats the change is less complete
and the.f0od value is consequently higher. Another point
is that hgnification takes place mostly in the last stages of
ripening, and goes on faster under hot and dry conditions.
IIence, as is well known, oat straw from the north of Scotland
is better than oat straw from the south-east of England
and, as is equally well known, any straw is of better feeding
value the crop has been cut somewhat green rather than
dead ripe.
In any straw there is, in fact a lar e amount of r'
or unhgnified .cellulose which, it coild be freely 22:11:13:ng
to the digestive processes, would be largely digested by
cattle, sheep, and horses. But the softer tissues are enclosed
and protected by the woody portions and especially by the
outer skin, which is not only heavily lignified but contains
a good deal of silica—the mineral that makes up the bulk
of ordinary sand.
- Cellulose, even in the form of sawdust, can be converted
into sugar, and the process, though it is costly, is apparently
beingused to some small extent in Germany; at any rate
experiments have been carried out in the use of wood-sugar
for pig-feedmg. By much simpler means the tiSSues of the
straw can be induced to soften and swell, and at the same
time the Silica can be dissolved out. This has been known
for many years—indeed in the last war many thousands of
tons of treated straw were produced and fed in Germany.
Recently a good deal of experimental work has been done
on the process in this country—by Dr Godden of the Rowett
Institute and, at the instigation of Dr R. E. Slade, by Dr
S. J. Watson at J ealott’s Hill, the research station of Imperial
Chemical Industries Ltd. The latter has explored the possi-
bilities both of a small-scale plant for the farm and of factory-
sc'ale plants which might be set up (possibly in conjunction
With beet-sugar factories) in those parts of England where
there is a surplus of straw even in ordinary times.
I Among the many processes that have been tried, some
mvolvmg high temperatures and pressures, it seems that
the soaking of the straw in a cold solution of caustic soda
is nearly as effective as any. The procedure is first to chop
the straw and then to soak it for about twenty hours in a
1% per cent solution of caustic soda. At the end of this
Title Transactions of RHASS Volume 1940 - Page 015