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Baiting Bill HB1618/SB1942
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<blockquote data-quote="Ski" data-source="post: 5851923" data-attributes="member: 20583"><p>Correct, the corn doesn't know the difference. The aflatoxin mold can grow on it regardless. I was only pointing out that pouring it directly onto the ground in piles amplifies the mold growth in comparison to corn that gets scattered or spilled during harvest. A spinning broadcast feeder still piles it up. It just does so over time rather than all at once. As I said in an earlier post, the corn that gets spilled during harvest is a collateral damage we accept because that farm is critical to feeding us humans. Doesn't mean that it's not still dangerous for wildlife. It only means we accept that harm because it does a bigger good for all of us. That's not the case with baiting.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ski, post: 5851923, member: 20583"] Correct, the corn doesn't know the difference. The aflatoxin mold can grow on it regardless. I was only pointing out that pouring it directly onto the ground in piles amplifies the mold growth in comparison to corn that gets scattered or spilled during harvest. A spinning broadcast feeder still piles it up. It just does so over time rather than all at once. As I said in an earlier post, the corn that gets spilled during harvest is a collateral damage we accept because that farm is critical to feeding us humans. Doesn't mean that it's not still dangerous for wildlife. It only means we accept that harm because it does a bigger good for all of us. That's not the case with baiting. [/QUOTE]
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