Cottonseed meal is about 40 percent protein by weight.[2] Compared to cellulose and lignin, proteins decompose rapidly and release nitrogen.[3] Unweathered, light-colored plant material such as hay, autumn tree leaves, sawdust, straw, woodchips, and wood shavings are nitrogen deficient, and do not decompose easily. Cottonseed meal, which is rich in nitrogen, is often mixed with these types of materials to improve decomposition speed.[4]
Whole cottonseed should not be fed to poultry and to ruminants like cattle, goats, and sheep.[2] Cottonseed meal also contains gossypol and cyclopropenoid fatty acids.[2] Cottonseed meal should only be fed to adult ruminants, as immature animals have less well-developed digestive systems. Gossypol is also highly toxic to monogastrics.[5] Cyclopropenoid fatty acids can have a number of effects, some adverse, such as reduced fertility in laying hens; alterations in the composition of fatty acids in blood plasma, the heart, the liver, and the ovaries; the slowing of growth in young animals; and B vitamin deficiency.[6] The protein in cottonseed meal is also low in lysine.[2]
Glandless cottonseed was developed in the early 1960s.[7] Cottonseed meal derived from glandless cottonseed contains almost no gossypol.[2]
References
^Card, Adrian; David Whiting; Carl Wilson; Jean Reeder (2009). "CMG Garden Notes #234 Organic Fertilizers"(PDF). Colorado State University Extension. p. 3. Archived from the original(PDF) on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
^Luses, E.W.; Jividen, G.M. (June 1987). "Glandless cottonseed: A review of the first 25 years of processing and utilization research". Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society. 64 (6): 839–854. doi:10.1007/BF02641491. S2CID93455770.