I have read it, and won't be faulted simply because you did not understand what you read.The Irish agricultural development board knows what it's talking about. Here's the pdf which you apparently didn't bother to read (and yes it's about cows, but I've yet to find anything from the pastured poultry sector that compares). No-one is suggesting that chickens can live entirely on grass. The question is, is grass good for them? what's in it?
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Grass is 83% water, according to your linked source.
Of what remains (17% dry matter), best case, 28% of that is protein. Worst case, just 11%.
Each 100g of grass, therefore, provides between 4.76 and 1.87g crude protein (according to this source - most of the studies I've read have put the high end of total crude protein lower - in the 18% of DM range - with a similar low end.).
Chicken feed is currently formulated, in the main, to provide between 16 and 20g crude protein as a daily ration for the typical feed. To meet that CP requirement, they would need to consume 4 (according to this source, best case) to more than 10 (worst case) times the weight of grass each day to replace 100g of a typical feed's CP. That's 400 to 1,000g per day, or between 1 and 2.2# of grass per day.
My typical production red hens weigh just 4.5# - that's roughly 1/4 to 1/2 their body weight in grass, daily. Just as I said.
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