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NATURAL LOW COST ZEOLITE PRODUCTS

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JNS SUPER Z® HORSE PRODUCTS
 
JNS SUPER Z® IS HIGH PURITY NATURAL HERBS AND CLINOPTILOLITE.
 

 

 

 

JNS SUPER Z® Odor Buster
APPLICATIONS AND BENEFITS

 
Summer Special $14.75 per 50lb Bag.

Please call for pallet pricing.

Odor Buster® Stall Freshener: A thin layer of JNS SUPER Z ® Odor Buster is laid down in the stall after cleaning. It is then reapplied each time the stall is cleaned or at regular intervals on top of the manure and wet urin spots. Use Odor Buster® in your horse trailer and tack room to remove odors.
 
The benefits are:

1.Adsorbs moisture and creates a drier environment that reduces hoof problems and   reduces flies.
2. Adsorbs and holds ammonium, the main source of odor.
3. The JNS SUPER Z® and manure make an excellent soil amendment.
 
  

 

 

                   
JNS SUPER Z®EQUINE SUPPLEMENT

 
Summer  Special $32.75 per 25lb Bag.

Please call for pallet pricing.
 

Horses are fed from 2 to 5% of the total ration on a weight basis of JNS SUPER Z® HORSE FEED SUPPLEMENT in mash feeds or as a topical supplement added to the feed.

The benefits are:

• Increased rate of gain.
• Balances Ph levels.
• Lowers the conversion ratio. Less feed per pound of gain.
• Improved nutrient digestion.
• Reduced Scours.
• Reduces cribbing (chewing on wood).
• Improves bone growth.
• Improves color of coat.

PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
 Clinoptilolite . 
 Natural herbs.
 
 
 
 
Use of Natural Zeolite’s in Feeding Sakha Horses
Natural Zeolite’s - SOFIA’95 Kirov, G., L. Filizova & O. Petrov (eds.) 1997, p. 73-74
Revory V. Ivanov Yakutsk, Russian Federation
 
INTRODUCTION:
The effect of natural zeolite’s in the feeding of domestic animals is of particular importance for their diet.
The purpose of the present paper is to study the influence of additions of natural zeolite’s to the diet on the growth of young horses during the autumn and winter periods.

EXPERIMENTAL:

The first experiment was preformed with Yakutian (Sakha) horses at an age of 1.5 years.
A group consisting of 30 horses was divided into 2 subgroups according to weight, sex and age. At the beginning of the experiment the weight of a horse in the control group (no.1) was about 244 kg. The duration of the experiment was 45 days and the diet consisted of 10 kg of hay and 5 kg of oats. A natural Zeolite (clinoptilolite) was added to the food of group 2. The second experiment was performed with horses at an age of 11 months which were combined in two groups with 6 horses in each kept in different enclosures. The basic diet consisted of 5 kg of hay and 2 kg of oats. The foals in the experimental group received 70 g of Zeolite per head daily within the basic diet. On the 30th day of the experiment 3 foals from each group were taken to control the digestion. The control methodology was the usual one for big domestic animals. The duration of the registration period was 6 days.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION:

 
At the end of the first experiment the foals from group 2 (experimental) weighted 5 kg more than the foals in group 1 (control). The daily increase was 200 g (15% more than in the control group). The actual consumption calculated by the expenditures of fodder units per kg of increase was 6.3 fodder units in the control group and 5.5 fodder units in group 2, hence it follow that to enjoy a 1 kg weight increase the animals spent 12.7% less nutrient energy. Large differences in the contents of common protein and its fractions in the blood serum of the horses in each group were not registered. Differences in the urea and residual nitrogen contents were not registered either.

These results show that the addition of a Zeolite does not cause any special changes in
protein exchange (table 1). From Table 1 it is seen that the contents of sugars in the blood of the experimental horses are by 45% higher which is evidence that the rate of metabolism in the organism is higher.

Table 1. Contents of sugars and nitrogen-containing compounds
in the blood serum of the horses.

Group Period Sugars, ml% Urea Residual Nitrogen
Controlled Beginning 16.2 ± 1.1 25.8 ± 0.2 22.9 ± 0.5
End 15.2 ± 1.0 30.2 ± 0.8 25.1 ± .04
Experimental Beginning 15.3 ± .08 27.6 ± 0.9 23.8 ± 0.5
End 22.0 ± 0.3 31.2 ± 2.0 25.0 ± 1.0
Table 2. Forage examples identical to the consumed ones and digestion coefficients.
Menu Group Dry substances Raw protein Raw grease Raw cell material
Chemical Analysis
Hay - 11.7 39.2 1.49
Oats - 14.3 14.1 2.93
Digestion Coefficients
Controlled 60.2 ± 1.6 61.3 ± 1.6 46.3 ± 2.2 45.3 ± 2.2
Experimental 65.3 ± 0.3 60.1 ± 0.3 67.8 ± 1.7 45.5 ± 0.6

Table 2 shows that the addition of 70 g of a Zeolite to the diet of young horses considerably improves the nutrients’ digestion. In the experimental group the amount of the exchange energy in the consumed food calculated by a regression equation was equal to 59.9 MJ showing a 4.1 MJ increase (6.8%).

CONCLUSION:

The results from the performed experiment confirm our supposition about the possibility of a direct influence of Zeolite additions to fodder on the exchange processes in the organisms of Sakha horses.