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The Rural Voice, 2006-04, Page 58The leading edge Plant extracts fortify milk University of Guelph researchers think they could be adding an extra plus to the long List of qualities attributed to milk by fortifying it with extracts from the Lunaria annua plant, commonly known as the money plant. The plant, that gets its name from having seed pods that resemble silver dollars, is rich in bioactive fatty acids, such as nervonic acid, that can be extracted from the plant's oils. Nervonic acid reportedly encourages brain development and reduces neurological disease risks. Professors Bill Bettger, department of human biology and nutritional sciences and Brian McBride, department of animal and poultry sciences want to incorporate nervonic acid into milk. They found they can do this by providing the money plant's natural oil as a feed supplement to dairy cattle. Bettger hopes this will help dairy producers add more value to milk while offering extra health benefits to consumers. "By using a plant source of nervonic acid, we can create a specialty milk product that's natural and will have added health benefits for the consumer," he said. Nervonic acid is sometimes recommended for small children, nursing or pregnant women and the elderly to improve brain development, mental focus and nerve transmission. Nervonic acid consumption can also reduce the risk of neurological disorders such as multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease, Money plant oil extract also contains erucic acid, a fatty acid linked to heart inflammation in some animal models of human disease. That's where the cows come in. Bettger and McBride have found that cattle can safely ingest the plant oils as a dietary supplement. Their digestive system naturally converts erucic acid into nervonic acid. As well, they discovered that dairy cattle will absorb nervonic acid during digestion and incorporate it into their milk. The final amount of nervonic acid in cow's milk can reach similar levels to those in human breast milk, McBride says. In cow's milk, Bettger says, the nutrient actually becomes part of the milk protein, not milk fat. Thus, it would be preserved during milk processing for use in low-fat dairy products and whey supplements. Researchers say the next step is finding an inexpensive and abundant source of money plant locally. Eventually, there could be a great potential for this process to be made available to the dairy industry, helping increase milk's nutritional quality and marketability. "This fortified milk will help shape the next generation of products we offer to consumers with more functional and nutritional benefits they can use to improve their health and well-being," said McBride.0 — Source: Milk Producer magazine Scientists discover genes that changed corn A team of researchers in a collaborative project between York University, the University of California, Irvine, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, University of Missouri and the University of Wisconsin has identified the genes that were preferentially selected by Native Americans 6,000 - 9,000 years ago, during the course of corn's domestication. The study revealed that of the 59,000 total genes in the corn genome, approximately 1,200 were preferentially targeted for selection during its domestication. The findings, published in the journal Science, estimate that 2 - 4 per cent of the 700 genes they studied contribute to important agricultural traits. "The identification of these genes will motivate studies that will provide maize geneticists and breeders with new insights and new tools," says Stephen Wright , a biology researcher in York's Faculty of Science & Engineering. 0 — Source: York University press release 54 THE RURAL VOICE Cool pigs grow faster, earn more Cooling pigs down by running ventilation fans longer in summer can mean extra profits, a researcher with the Prairie Swine Centre says. Bernardo Predicala said tests have shown that cooler pigs grow faster than hotter pigs in the summer and that keeping ventilation fans running all night can help achieve those results. "The slight differences (in production) are enough to realize gains if you calculate economic benefit," Predicala said. His research found that pigs in cooler rooms at night had average daily gains of 2.1 to 5.2 per cent higher than in rooms that were two degrees C warmer. He believes the gains in growth came from the cooler pigs eating more. Pigs in the cooler rooms ate an average of 3.2 per cent more than those in hotter rooms. The cooling demanded no extra equipments, Predicala said. The only difference from normal practice was leaving the ventilation fans running all night, bringing in the maximum amount of cool air from outside. Usually fans run only when the preset temperature threshold is reached. Many times during the night the fans will not operate if a high threshold is set. Predicala set the ventilation fans to run in the test rooms until the temperature fell to six degrees below the usual nighttime temperature, a threshold the barns never reached. That means the fans kept running. Predicala said that after the cost of running the fans was subtracted from the gain from faster pig growth, the bottom line was 80 cents per pig net gain for any pig sold over the summer. A two -degree temperature difference may seem small, Predicala said, but "it is enough to affect the performance of the pig."0 — Source: The Western Producer