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What's the difference between free-range and free-range?
Free-range breeding requires feeding, and stocking does not require feeding.

Free range: refers to the way of raising livestock and poultry.

Stocking: put some wild animals in captivity back into the wild environment and let them live according to their original lifestyle within a certain range. For example, the original captive chickens are put in greenhouses or some protected forests, so that they can have enough room for activities in these environments and eat freely, so that their bodies are healthier and more profits can be made in the market.

Extended data:

1, stocking: first, raising livestock outside the enclosure; The second is to put fish, shrimp, duckweed and other economically valuable animals and plants in a certain place for them to grow and reproduce; The third is to release it to wild animals.

Nowadays, many people call children "free-range", that is to say, let children develop in a larger environment, give them extensive freedom, give them a wide range of autonomy and choice, and reduce the constraints of family, school and society.

References:

Free range-Baidu Encyclopedia

References:

Stocking-Baidu Encyclopedia