Yes it is very high fiber, and hard to break down.
yes as it contains dietary fibre.
If they are fed a balanced amount of corn and roughage, they will not become ill. However, if they gorge or are fed too much corn without a source of roughage, an increase risk of bloat or other digestive problems may occur.
Roughage is high in fiber and includes hay, silage, and pasture, providing bulk to the diet. Concentrates are high in energy and protein and include grains like corn and soybeans. For dairy animals, an example of roughage would be alfalfa hay and an example of concentrate would be corn.
does peanut have roughage.
No, corn on the cob is not considered a fruit. It is classified as a vegetable.
It is the beauty of roughage that it has no calories in it. With no calories in the roughage, you have many advantages with roughage. Roughage saves you from cancer of colon. roughage gives you smooth motion every day. It absorbs some fatty acids with them and gives you negative calories, probably.
Yes, corn is considered as a plant.
Yes. Roughage is the same thing as fiber. Both baked beans (or any kind of beans, really) and prunes (as well as most fruits and vegetables) contain fiber.
The best Fitness food is celery and corn because it has so much fiber and roughage that you will lose weight from passing it out of your body. They are negative calorie foods.
roughage
Hay is the main source of roughage in a horse's diet.
There are multiple nutrients a person would be deprived of by having this type of diet and if they fear they are having complications due to this they should probably go see a doctor ASAP. Corn is considered roughage (high in fiber) and will not supply a human being, or much else for that matter, with efficient vitamins and nutrients.