Open Mon - Fri 7:30am-5:30pm and Saturdays 8am-12pm
36 Sydney Road, Mudgee NSW 2850
Open Mon - Fri 7:30am-5:30pm and Saturdays 8am-12pm
36 Sydney Road, Mudgee NSW 2850
We stock a huge range of produce for every kind of livestock!
Poultry feed, sheep and cattle nuts, whole and steam rolled grains, lamb and calf milk, dog and cat food, all purpose pellets, chaff, and much much more.
We also carry a variety of mineral lick blocks to keep your animals in peak condition no matter the season or situation.
Our staff are trained to advise you on the best options for your animals and farming enterprise so call in and talk to the team at CRS today!
Two lucky winners can take home a bag each of our new product Fibre Protect.
FiberProtect® is a moist, high energy, high nutritional fibre feed comprising of fresh cut lucerne and suitable as the base forage fibre for all horses.
Ewes grazing cereal crops are at risk of metabolic disorders caused by mineral deficiencies, such as hypocalcaemia. This risk can be significantly reduced if the correct supplements are provided, MLA-funded research has revealed.
The research confirmed that grazing dual-purpose and spring varieties of wheat, barley and oats can lead to metabolic disorders in reproducing ewes, due to the lower-than-required levels of calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg) and sodium (Na) and higher-than-tolerable level of potassium (K).
However, Dr David Masters, a livestock systems scientist working on the project with Murdoch University, Charles Sturt University and the NSW Department of Primary Industries, said the traditional industry supplement of lime/salt/causmag (40:20:40) could improve the mineral status of reproducing ewes. Research continues on the development of an even more effective targeted supplement that will further reduce risk.
While research is ongoing, David said the key messages to producers were:
The research team found ewes grazing wheat were most at risk of deficiencies and, while risks with barley or oats appear lower, further investigation is still needed.
Mineral deficiencies were consistent with a high risk of hypocalcaemia or hypomagnesaemia (grass tetany).
In the first year of trials, the mineral status of forage and of pregnant ewes grazing vegetative crops was monitored on 18 farms in Western Australia and southern and central NSW in the final third of pregnancy for 14–24 days.
In 2016, six farms were used with a paddock on each farm divided into three plots to provide forage for 30 ewes for about one month. The ewes were mature, mostly twin bearing and in the last third of pregnancy.
One group was given no supplement (control), another was provided with the standard industry supplement (lime/salt/causmag) and the third group was provided with a mineral supplement specially designed to address potential metabolic disorders.
"The results showed that both mineral supplements improved Ca and, to a lesser extent, Mg status and decreased the risk of hypocalcaemia and hypomagnesaemia. In the control (the unsupplemented ewes), Ca in plasma and urine was in the deficient range for some ewes," David said.
More information
Dr David Masters
E: davidmasters@bigpond.com
Article from https://www.mla.com.au/news-and-events/industry-news/managing-mineral-deficiencies/
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