Animal Feed Formulation Economics and Co PDF
Animal Feed Formulation Economics and Co PDF
Animal Feed Formulation Economics and Co PDF
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
Book Reviews
the printing of custom feed-mixing sheets. The program calculates shadow prices of
ingredients and nutrients. Windows which can be accessed from the main menu include:
edit a feed, ingredient limits, nutrient limits, objective function, ingredient composition
matrix, nutrient ratios, formulate and print. There is also an ‘include’ window, which is
used to transfer data from one problem to another, and a ‘calculator’ window. The user
can move from one window to another by using function keys, using the FlO key to
access the main menu, or by pointing and clicking with a mouse or other pointing
device. The default output is an IBM compatible graphics printer; for other printers it is
recommended that the output be printed to disk as an ASCII file and then printed using a
word-processing program.
Animal Feed Formulation: Economics and Computer Applications is a well-written
book with numerous tables and several figures included for clarity. The authors have a
good writing style and their step-by-step approach is clear and easy to follow. They have
incorporated a great deal of nutritional information in the examples, which greatly adds
to the value of the book. Considerable attention has been paid to maximum profit
formulations, with the authors demonstrating, among other things, that least-cost diet is
not necessarily the most profitable for broilers, how the most profitable level of milk
production can be determined for dairy cows, and how to optimize profit and dietary net
energy in beef cattle diets. The computer program is reasonably easy to use with the
editing capabilities of a spreadsheet program. There are, however, a few peculiarities of
the program which will take some getting used to. For example, you need to go to help
or the book to understand that you must hold down the control key and press insert to
make space for a new ingredient or nutrient when entering feed composition and
requirement data. Using this procedure the first ingredient or constraint which is entered
apparently always remains last on the list in the computer, which at times was
disconcerting. Also, it took me time to become accustomed to the need to press the enter
key each time data was entered rather than simply moving to the next location for data
entry by using the arrow key. The lack of drivers for different printers will be annoying
to many users.
I highly recommend Animal Feed Formulation: Economics and Computer Applica-
tions with the computer software. It will be particularly useful for advanced livestock
and poultry producers who recognize that feed costs are the largest costs in production.
The material would be great for animal science students, although I will not be able to
use the text in my nutrition classes because of its specialized nature. Although
professional nutritionists will probably have access to better computer programs, most
will find something new and worthwhile in the discussion of linear programming
applications.
GARY W. MATHISON
Department of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Science
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2P5
Canada
PII SO377-8401(97>00024-2