Sunflower |
Sunflower seed. Products proceeding from sunflower are the main source of concentrate vegetal protein, with an annual consumption over half a million MT per year. |
Sunflower |
Sunflower seed. Products proceeding from sunflower are the main source of concentrate vegetal protein, with an annual consumption over half a million MT per year. |
Soya |
Soya bean. Excellent source of energy and protein, especially lysine, it also contains a remarkable amount of many other essential nutrients, such as leinoleic acid and choline, both of them richly contained within soya beans. |
Rapeseed |
Colza seed. Main colza seeds used nowadays in animal feeding are varieties of brassica napus and campestris. |
Sunflower meal |
Products proceeding from sunflower are the main source of concéntrate vegetal protein, with an anual consumption over half a million MT per year. The seed undergoes a pervious husking process and afterwards an extraction process using solvents or pressure. Sometimes husk is not separated from meal, obtaining as a result whole grain sunflower meal. |
Soya bean meal |
Soya vean meal. Excellent source of energy and protein, especially lysine, it also contains a remarkable amount of many other essential nutrients, such as leinoleic acid choline, both of them highly contained within soya beans. |
Rapessed Meal |
Rapeseed extraction meal. Main derivatives from rapeseed used nowadays in animal feeding are varieties of brassica napus and campestris, both them with a low rate of erucic acid (less tan 1% of fat) and glucosinolates (less tan 15 micromol/gr.) named as Double Zero varieties (00), or Canola (in Canada). |
Soya husk |
Soya husk is a derivative appearing while procesing soya beans to obtain soya oil. During this process, grains are ground until reaching a size of no more tan 3-4 mm. and husk is extracted by suction. |
Spring pea |
Most common variety used in composed feedstuff comes from the subspecies Pisum sativum hortense (white flowered), while subspecies arvense (colour flowered) are mainly used as fodder. |
Cotton seed |
Cotton is mainly raised to use the fiber in fabric production (which means around 40% of fruit total weight). The left over is the seed, commonly used for animal feeding. |