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Are cows pickier than goats? Answers from innovative large-scale feeding experiments from 275 years ago

For his 18th century thesis, Carl Linnaeus collected 643 different plant species that were then fed to horses, cows, pigs, sheep and goats. The results were carefully compiled but not analyzed until now, 275 years later, when they were also published in the Biological Journal of the Linnean Society.

"It may have been the first experiment in what would only later become the subject of ecology in the late 19th century. By today's standards, it was a huge experiment involving an impressive number of plants," notes Håkan Rydin, Professor of Plant Ecology at Uppsala University and one of the researchers who carried out the analysis.

Linnaeus' thesis, Pan Svecicus, describes 2,325 experiments involving 643 different plant species. It was published in 1749 and defended by his student, Nils Hesselgren. Earlier, Linnaeus and his disciples had traveled around Sweden collecting information from farmers about the best pastures for their animals.

Although the thesis was translated into German and English and was known among contemporary botanists in Europe, the results were never analyzed. Now, however, Rydin has worked with other researchers to compile and analyze the data.

The results show that pigs were the most selective, eating 32% of the 204 plant species tested on all the animals. This was followed by horses at 59%, cows at 66%, sheep at 82% and goats at 85%. The animals generally preferred legumes and grasses.

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