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Animal feed

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Photo: FoodandYou, 1-soybean-harvest-brazil-co, Flickr Creative commons licence 2.0
Resource
Property Rights and the Soybean Revolution: Shaping How China and Brazil Are Telecoupled
This article takes a closer look at the telecoupling between China and Brazil based on their soybean trading relationships. Telecoupling is the term used to describe the interconnectedness or coupling of natural and human systems and it indicates that there are complex socioeconomic and environmental interactions over distances.
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Photo: Kelly Mercer, Edible crickets, Flickr, Creative Commons License 2.0 generic.
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Life cycle assessment of cricket farming in north-eastern Thailand
In this paper FCRN member Afton Halloran and colleagues Hanboonsong, Roos and Bruun present a life cycle assessment of insect farming, based on their research on cricket and broiler farms in north-eastern Thailand as well as a socio-economic impact analysis of this production.
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Photo: Oregon State University, Oregon dairy cows, Flickr, Creative Commons License 2.0 generic.
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Dairy cows value access to pasture as highly as fresh feed
This research measures dairy cows’ motivation to access the outdoors. The results show cows are highly motivated for outdoor access. The majority of the cows in this experiment pushed through a weighted gate at least as hard to access pasture as they did to access fresh feed.
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Photo © Dave Smith via Flickr
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Livestock: On our plates or eating at our table?
This research article provides a new quantitative analysis of data on global feed use and feed use efficiency by livestock, in order to help shed light on livestock’s role in food security.
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Photo credit: Bruno Girin, Flickr, Creative Commons License 2.0
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Total global agricultural land footprint associated with UK food supply 1986–2011
With global trade, UK consumption patterns are displacing cropland use to other countries. This paper by FCRN members Henri de Ruiter, Jennie Macdiarmid and Pete Smith looks at the environmental consequences of competition for global agricultural land and specifically at the total land footprint associated with the total livestock product supply in the UK.  
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Report on industrial food animal production in low- and middle-income countries
This report by the John Hopkins Center for a Livable Future presents itself as the ‘first international landscape assessment of industrial food animal production (IFAP) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) to focus on trends in food animal production, related domestic and international policies, environmental and public health impacts and animal welfare.’
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Photo credit: Sam Beebe, Cows n Canoe, Flickr, Creative Commons licence 2.0
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Feeding cows seaweed could slash global greenhouse gas emissions, researchers say
A chance discovery was made in Canada 11 years ago, when it was observed that cattle in a paddock near the sea are more productive. This led to research showing that feeding cows seaweed not only helped improve their health and growth, but also reduced their enteric methane emissions by about 20%.
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Photo: Rod Waddington, After the Rainforest Uganda, Flickr, Creative Commons License 2.0
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Biodiversity protection and carbon storage demands to change global patterns of land use in the future
In this paper, land change scenarios are modelled that include biodiversity protection or afforestation for carbon sequestration as an explicit demand which competes with demand for food and feed production.
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Environmental and health impacts of using food waste as animal feed: a comparative analysis of food waste management options
This paper analyses the options for and impacts of using food waste as animal feed and is the first study to compare the environmental impacts of recycling municipal food waste as animal feed with alternative disposal options in the EU.
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