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For eight weeks this summer, Banuelos fed six pounds of the leftover canola meal each day to 36 Jersey and Holstein dairy cows at California State University at Fresno as part of their 100-pound rations, eliminating the need for adding the critical dietary salt. The cows did well, Banuelos said, and produced a milk with trace amounts of selenium, a potential cancer-fighter that humans need in small amounts for good health. Diener is readying his fields for his second crop of canola, with yields of $300 an acre that pale next to the $6,000 an acre he can earn growing almonds on his prime land. But the potential to sell it as a dietary supplement for some of the San Joaquin Valley's 2.5 million dairy cows holds promise. "It's potentially the most valuable part of the process," Diener said. "In the end, we're capitalists." ___ On the Net: U.S. Canola Association:
http://www.uscanola.com/
[Associated
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