You would eat the chicken because it uses up energy and does n't transmit much energy into the chiken egg- so it is the most economical way :)
Some popular corn recipes would be corn bread, corn tortillas, corn on the cob, creamed corn or corn fritters. Most all corn recipes can be found in the Betty Crocker Cookbook or on the Food Network website.
I would probably eat the biggest chicken for beginner course. And then I would feed the remaining 3 chickens half of the corn, and eat them for the main course, so that I have a tasty mixture of chicken and corn. And I would then have the remaining second half of corn for desert.
You would get more energy from eating the corn directly. In general, only about 10% of the energy gets passed up the food chain which means that you only get 10% of the energy that was originally contained in the corn by eating the cow that ate the corn.
You would get more energy from eating the corn directly. In general, only about 10% of the energy gets passed up the food chain which means that you only get 10% of the energy that was originally contained in the corn by eating the cow that ate the corn.
Chicken feed does have corn in it.
first get the chicken take it across then the corn take the chicken back to where it started then take the fox to the corn then take the chicken done it's simple by the way this is answered by a 9 year old
We feed this wild chicken we found corn after we ate the corn of the cob it pecks at it and eats the indside
Ingredients that you would generally find in recipes for chicken dinners are potatoes, flour, corn and rice. Salads of various types are also commonly associated with chicken.
Not necessarily. The term chicken snake can refer to several species of snake. The corn snake is one of them.
Yes, they can, but deer corn is whole kernel corn. It is much harder for the birew to digest in that form. It would be better to feed cracked corn, corn that has gone through at least one stage of a mill. Deer corn is usually fed to deer, cows and other large animals that will chew it to break it up. Chickens, of course, have no teeth, and if a chicken has a choice between whole kernel corn or cracked corn, it instinctively goes for the cracked corn.
A simple chicken recipe that would work well with an outdoor cookout is a recipe of some fried chicken, and that person could serve corn and mashed potatoes as well.
Absolutely not, arsenic would kill a chicken. Chickens are usually feed wheat or corn grain. I own chickens and that is what mine eat.