Hog fattening enterprise : an entrepreneurial project / by Christian Jay A. Panganiban and Queeniee May P. Vicedo.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Indang, Cavite : 2017. Cavite State University- Main Campus,Description: xii, 26 pages : illustrations ; 28 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 636.413 P19 2017
- College of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Natural Resources (CAFENR)
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | URL | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Theses / Manuscripts | Ladislao N. Diwa Memorial Library Theses Section | Non-fiction | 636.413 P19 2017 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Link to resource | Room use only | EDP-408 | 00011371 |
Entrepreneurial Development Project (Bachelor in Agricultural Entrepreneurship--Animal Production) Cavite State University
Includes bibliographical references.
College of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Natural Resources (CAFENR)
PANGANIBAN CHRISTIAN JAY A. AND VICEDO QUEENIE MAY P: Hog Fattening Enterprise: An Entrepreneurial Project. Entrepreneurial Development Project Report Bachelor in Agricultural Entrepreneurship, Cavite State University, Cavite, Philippines. May 2017. Adviser: Dr. Irvin dL. Matel
The project was conducted in Barangay Palumlum, Alfonso, Cavite from February 2017 to April 2017. It was conducted for the entrepreneur students to gain experience and managerial skills in hog fattening operation, to apply what they learned in school, enhance knowledge in managing hog fattening and asses the profitability of hog fattening enterprise.
A total of 8 heads of fatteners with an average initial body weight of 18 kg were raised. After a rearing period of 81 days, the hogs consumed a total of 400 kg of hog starter feeds with an average feed consumption of 50 kg per head. A total of 600 kg of hog grower feeds was also consumed with an average feed consumption of 75 kg per head. The hogs obtained an average final body weight of 67.875 kg, with a gain in weight of 49.875 and with a feed efficiency of 2.50 kg. The harvest recovery was 100 percent. The project was found profitable with a net income of PI 1, 855.00 and a return on investment of 20.17 percent.
Submitted copy to the University Library. 08-23-2017 EDP-408