Extractions: Fumonisin Levels in Animal Feed (Draft) Guidance for Industry: Fumonisin Levels in Human Foods and Animal Feeds SUMMARY of RECOMMENDED LEVELS for TOTAL FUMONISINS in FEED Table I . Summary of Recommended Levels for Total Fumonisins (FB + FB + FB ) in Corn, Corn By-products, and the Total Ration in Various Animal Species. Animal or Class Recommended Maximum Level of Total Fumonisins in Corn and Corn By-Products (ppm Feed Factor Recommended Maximum Level of Total Fumonisins in the Total Ration (ppm Horse Rabbit Catfish Swine Ruminants Mink Poultry All Others total fumonisins = FB + FB + FB
Boron goats orally dosed with toxic but sublethal amounts of boron show significant increases agric Res 1987;Nov/Dec1213. 7. Hunt CD, Shuler TR, Mullen LM. http://www.thorne.com/altmedrev/fulltext/boron2-1.html
Extractions: Boron: A Review of its Nutritional Interactions and Therapeutic Uses Gregory S. Kelly, N.D. Abstract Boron is a trace mineral which is found in highest amounts in fruits, vegetables, nuts, and legumes. Although it has not been demonstrated unequivocally to be an essential nutrient for humans, increasing evidence indicates that boron deficiency and supplementation exert measurable biological effects. Boron has been shown to impact mineral metabolism, brain function and performance, and selected hormone levels. Because of its impact on mineral metabolism and hormones associated with bone formation, boron supplementation is considered to be important in the prevention of osteoporosis. Epidemiological evidence suggests that adequate boron in the diet may also prevent arthritis. Limited clinical observations support a possible role for boron in the treatment of this condition. (Alt Med Rev 1997;2(1):48-56) Introduction Boron is a ubiquitous constituent of man's external environment, which typically occurs in nature as borates hydrated with varying amounts of water. Boric acid and borax are important boron-containing compounds. In trace amounts, boron is essential for the growth of many plants, and is found in animal and human tissues at low concentrations.
Extractions: The references cited here were compiled for the January 1996 review vesrsion of "Keys ...", with limited keywords and short annotations included for most to place them in context. The references are arranged as a single list, aphabetized by name of the first author, or by convenient acronyms for agency documents. Further references will be added from time to time. Abbott, Newton Carl; Carver, Fred E., 1978, The evolution of Washington counties. (compiled by Helm, J. W.): Yakima Valley Genealogical Society and Klickitat County Historical Society. [ keys: settlement ] History of the organization of the Oregon Territory and the transitions to Washington Territory and statehood. Includes maps showing the early counties. Allen, John Eliot, 1995, Meditations on equilibrium punctuations in Oregon: Oregon Geology, vol. 57, No. 5, September 1995, p. 116-117. [ keys: geol; climate ] A reflective essay relating the concept of punctuated equilibrium advanced by Eldredge and Gould for biological evolution to geologic processes, especially erosion. The application to landslides and flood events is particularly relevant to geologic processes of the Dungeness basin. Alt, David D.; Hyndman, Donald W., 1995, Northwest Exposures A geologic story of the Northwest: Mountain Press Publishing Company, Missoula, 443 p.
Portal Toolkit Invalid Site URL Food agric Immunol 1990;23746. Context Link. 8. Douwes J, van der Sluis B, Purification and characterization of alt a-29 from alternaria alternata. http://ppv.ovid.com/pt/re/algy/fulltext.00000381-200009000-00009.htm
Internet Environment Mail Lists altTRANSP/listserv@uci.edu/Issues and policies pertaining to alternative and non-motorized goats/listproc@listproc.wsu.edu/Goat Management http://ces.iisc.ernet.in/hpg/envis/docenv76.html
Extractions: The following list of Internet email discussion groups was originally posted in 4 parts to the Environment on the Net discussion group (which is included in the list). I am forwarding it on to you for your information. I am compiling a sub-group of all the lists that deal specifically with industrial pollution prevention (a lot smaller than this list and also a little more comprehensive) and will be posting it later. The IPP (Industrial Pollution Prevention) mailing list archive may be viewed from your favorite Web browser at gopher://gopher.ctd.anl.gov/11/ ANL_Computing_info/ ANL_Mailing_Lists/ industrial_pollution_prevention. This Web page contains an archive of all the postings to the IPP list by month. In addition, the archive is WAIS indexed once a day and the Web page has an entry to allow for keyword searches to be done against the index. The results of the search are hyperlinks to the IPP postings containing the keywords. These postings can be viewed by selecting them from the search results page.
On-farm Processing Of The Products Of Livestock Systems although largely from cows milk, goats milk and ewes milk products can also be found. In the meat sector, fresh meat cuts are sold Oth. alt. enterprises http://www.macaulay.ac.uk/livestocksystems/nafplio/proceedings/revellpaper.htm
Extractions: identify the population of on-farm processors, their location and product ranges manufactured examine the interaction and organisation of the farming and processing production systems establish the principle methods of marketing and distribution of on-farm processed products assess the potential demand and markets for these products. A number of major themes, issues and specific questions arose and were explored in the study in relation to its broad objectives. 1. The Economic Importance of On-Farm Processing Was the activity largely found on small or large holdings? Does it contribute significantly to farm household income? Does on-farm processing generate employment, especially in less favoured rural areas? 2. The Dynamics of the Processing Enterprise, its Management and that of the Farm Did it have an old-traditional base or was it a dynamic new activity on holdings pro-actively adjusting to the changing economic fortunes of European agriculture? What were the principal problems and difficulties in establishing the on-farm processing enterprise?
TNC Invasive Species Initiative Page it is now common in the agric. areas of all mainland States is 2030C with alt. light/dark 60% in dark; 64% at 20C constant in dark, http://tncweeds.ucdavis.edu/global/australia/pol.html
Extractions: Polemoniaceae Cobaea,scandens, ,,,,,,,Weed Science List Collomia,grandiflora,,,,,,,,Australian Naturalised and/or Noxious Taxa Collomia,grandiflora, ,,,,,C. coccinea,"Scattered in Central Europe, mostly Germany. N Amer native",Hanf "Arable Weeds of the World" Collomia,grandiflora, ,,,,,,,Weed Science List Collomia,linearis,,,,,,,,Australian Naturalised and/or Noxious Taxa Gilia,tricolor,,,,,,,,Australian Naturalised and/or Noxious Taxa Gilia (See Navarretia),, ,,,,,"Source: "USA Composite List of Weeds" published by WSSA WEEDS 14: 347-386, 1966",,WSSA WEEDS 14: 1966 Navarretia,intertexta, ,woolly gilia,,,,"Source: "USA Composite List of Weeds" published by WSSA WEEDS 14: 347-386, 1966",,WSSA WEEDS 14: 1966
TNC Invasive Species Initiative Page cattle pigs more susceptible than sheep goats; cattle losses have been little importance as agric. weed, usually occuring on abandoned garden http://tncweeds.ucdavis.edu/global/australia/aca.html
Extractions: Acanthaceae Acanthus,mollis,,Bears Breaches,X,N,,,,Australian Naturalised and/or Noxious Taxa Acanthus,mollis, ,Bears Breach,,,,"Dispersal: Vegetative. Life Form: Perennial herb. RISK: Potential threat to one or vegetation formations (Victoria). Vegetation Formations Invaded: 1,8","Introduced deliberately from: Eur and Commercially Available, , In Victoria: Rare or localised, small populations",Environmental Weed Invasions In Victoria Acanthus,montanus, ,,,,,,,Weed Science List Acanthus,montanus, ,,,P,,,,Western Australian Prohibited List Acanthus,ptarmica, ,,,,,,,Weed Science List
Notes For Final Exam brought agric pastoralism new boat ideas - Lapita pottery sheep and goats, cattle, pigs - took place in Fertile Crescent - pp 230 - http://www.mccd.edu/faculty/gauglerc/Geog-2 notes.htm
Extractions: What is Geography? = the scientific study of the physical and biotic features of our Earth.... describing the locations and characteristics of Earths living and non-living elements. geographers travel the world, observe, write about what they see, and draw pictures = maps geographers also search for the meanings and consequences of distributions Six Essential Elements of Geography 1) World in spatial terms 2) Places and regions 3) Physical systems 4) Human systems 5) Environment and society 6) Uses of geography Hemispheres... northern and southern western and eastern Parallels of Latitude.... tropic of Cancer 23.5 N Capricorn 23.5 S Horse latitudes arctic and antarctic circles Equator Meridians of Longitude...Prime Meridian deg Greenwich, England, International date line =180 deg W = in ocean east of Australia and New Guinea Maps = graphic representations of spatial and numerical relationships Scale How big do you make your map? City vs world maps
Garden State EnviroNet industry altTRANSP/listserv@uci.edu/Issues and policies pertaining to alternative Moderated goats/listproc@listproc.wsu.edu/Goat Management GOVPUB/ http://www.gsenet.org/library/05dir/env-lsts.php
Extractions: We thank these organizations for their continued support. ; EcoCompass@islandpress.coml; jhanson@ilhawaii.net; Davide Viaggi ; Aldo Pier Solaris ; ENVIRONMENT-L; ecol-agric@mailbase.ac.uk; Tom Hodges, ; Peter Pissierssens ; mclis-l@vm1.mcgill.ca , TNT ; Kathy E. Gill ; Marilyn Walker ; Transportation Mailing Lists, http://northshore.shore.net/~kester/cl_lists.html, by Colin R. Leech
LOTUS NEWSLETTER, No IN THE WET MOUNTAINOUS CASPIAN ZONE, UP TO 2700 M alt., THE DECIDUOUS FORESTS goats AND SHEEP WERE EFFECTIVE IN CONTROLLING MOST TALLGROWING FORBS AND http://www.psu.missouri.edu/lnl/v26/Lotus_NL.htm
23rd World Buiatrics Congress L Québec/2004 - Abstracts 1 To 100 Razi University, Ministry of Research and Technology, College of agric., Sheep and goats The prevalence of antibodies to pestiviruses was investigated http://www.ivis.org/proceedings/wbc/wbc2004/abstr_601_700.htm
Vascular Plant Herbarium (DAO), Catalogue Of Type Specimens agric. Misc. Publ. 243 351352. 1936 CUBA Province Santa Clara, Motembo, MOROCCO Bu Meziat, 1700 m alt., P. Font i Quer, 8 July 1927, ? ISOTYPE http://res2.agr.gc.ca/ecorc/daotypes/s_e.htm
MARKETING SASKATCHEWAN SPECIALTY LIVESTOCK Goat production has been a classic for specialty livestock in that there were always http//www.agric.za/oudts/ Oudtshoorn Experimental Farm http://www.agr.gov.sk.ca/afif/Projects/96000322/default.htm
Extractions: MARKET RESEARCH AND ANALYSIS FOR THE SPECIALIZED LIVESTOCK INDUSTRIES Project number: 96000322 February, 1998 Prepared by: PPD Technologies Inc. TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUME 1. FINAL REPORT 1. INTRODUCTION 2. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 3. SASKATCHEWAN SPECIALTY LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION AND MARKETING 4. CANADIAN PRODUCTION AND MARKETING ... 8. RECOMMENDATIONS AND CONCLUSIONS VOLUME 2. APPENDICES 1. MARKETING BIBLIOGRAPHY 2. MARKET PROFILES OF SELECT COMPANIES 3. CANADIAN IMPORT-EXPORT DATA 4. US IMPORT-EXPORT DATA 5. SELECT FOREIGN IMPORT-EXPORT DATA 6. GAME EXPORT REGULATIONS ... 8. CONTACTS INTRODUCTION The Saskatchewan Specialty Livestock Marketing Study was undertaken for the Agri-Food Investment Fund by PPD Technologies Inc. The study was completed over the months of June to October 1997, was limited to the specialty livestock sectors currently produced in Saskatchewan. This project was sponsored by the Canada-Saskatchewan Agri-Food Innovation Fund. The specialty livestock sectors covered by this study include: bison, ostrich, emu, rhea, rabbit, game birds, horses, elk, white tailed deer, fallow deer, wild boar and sheep. However during the course of the study, some of the specialty livestock groups either elected not to participate (elk) or, more often the case, were in organizational turmoil as commodity groups and were not capable of continued participation (emu, rhea, game birds). The study is aimed primarily at marketing specialty livestock, but discusses when necessary, production and organizational issues.
PRELIMINARY REVIEW OF THE Nearly all the rare native species on Goat Island and other islands above the cataracts occur on Branch agric. Canada, Ottawa. Eaton, EF Schrot. 1987. http://www.mobot.org/plantscience/ResBot/niag/Misc/PrelimReview-Clintonia2.htm
Extractions: May 26, 2004 Home PRELIMINARY REVIEW OF THE RARE PLANTS OF THE NIAGARA RIVER GORGE, U.S.A. AND CANADA by P.M. Eckel Clinton Herbarium Buffalo Museum of Science [Originally published in Clintonia (Botanical Magazine of the Niagara Frontier Botanical Society) 6(2, Supplement): 1-8. 1991. Reprinted with permission.] Because of a number of recent proposals to develop the Niagara River gorge and its environment by government and private interests, it was thought important to put together certain information accumulated during work done by the author over the past decade regarding the value of the gorge as a natural resource to the governments of Ontario and New York. The Niagara River is a strait connecting Lakes Ontario and Erie. The gorge section of the Niagara River extends seven miles from the cataracts of the river, situated beside the cities of Niagara Falls, New York, and Niagara Falls, Ontario, north to the cities of Lewiston, New York, and Queenston, Ontario (Bastedo, in Tesmer, 1981). The Niagara River, including its gorge, forms the international territorial boundary between the United States of America and the Dominion of Canada. It is not the purpose of this paper to describe in detail the geophysical and biological characteristics of this gorge except in the most general terms. It is oriented generally north-south, with east/west exposures of the steep gorge walls. Gorge depth varies from its shallowest end at the falls, around 167 feet, and is on average around 209 feet from the surface of the river. The caprock is composed of dolomite, with limestone, shales and sandstone in the lower strata.
Extractions: This Article Abstract Full Text (PDF) Alert me when this article is cited ... Alert me if a correction is posted Services Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in PubMed Alert me to new issues of the journal Download to citation manager PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by Richards, H. A. Articles by Stewart, C. N., Jr Research Communication Harold A. Richards Chung-Ting Han Robin G. Hopkins Mark L. Failla William W. Ward and C. Neal Stewart, Jr Food Safety Center of Excellence, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996; Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina Greensboro, Greensboro, NC 27402; Department of Human Nutrition, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210; Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08901; and Department of Plant Science and Landscape Systems, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996
Llama And Alpaca Farming Having some frozen baggies of goat or cow colostrum (first milk) available, http//www.agric.gov.ab.ca/agdex/400/491_8301.pdf. Agdex 491/830-1. 11 p. http://www.attra.org/attra-pub/llamaalpaca.html
Extractions: kb Regulations Llamas Alpacas Marketing ... Futher Resources Llamas or alpacas can be a good addition to the farm or ranch-an alternative livestock enterprise that fits well into a diversified farming operation. Marginal pastureland, not prime farmland, is suitable for raising llamas and alpacas with some supplemental feeding. There are currently over 200,000 llamas and over 20,000 alpacas in North America ( There are four types of lama (the genus name is spelled with one 'l'). They are the llama, the alpaca, the guanaco, and the vicuna. All are members of the Camelidae family. Modified ruminants with a three-compartment stomach, they have cloven hooves and chew a cud like sheep and cattle. The llama and alpaca have been domesticated in South America for many centuries. The llama, the largest of the types, is used as a beast of burden, as a fiber source, and as a meat source in South America. The alpaca is used primarily for fiber production, but is also used as a meat source in South America. The guanaco and vicuna are wild animals that are protected from hunting in South America.
Compost: Application And Use, QB 97-01 Costello, MJ Biolagric-hortic v.10(3) p.207-222. (1994) Composting of goat dung with various additives for improved fertilizer capacity. http://www.nal.usda.gov/afsic/AFSIC_pubs/qb9701.htm
800 Disease Links http//www.agric.gov.ab.ca/pests/diseases/turfgras.htmlMajor Diseases of Turf http//www.inform.umd.edu/EdRes/Topic/AgrEnv/ndd/goat/DIARRHEAL_DISEASES. http://www.mysteries-megasite.com/main/bigsearch/disease-3.html
Extractions: Go to Frames! Break Out of Frames Search Mystery Links Home Page-Site Guide ... http://www.who.int/health-topics/idindex.htm WHO/OMS: Infectious diseases Last update: 21-Dec-2001 African trypanosomiasis Buruli Ulcer Chagas disease Cholera... http://rarediseases.info.nih.gov/ Office of Rare Diseases - Welcome to our Website Office of Rare Diseases Skip Navigation Links... http://www.aasld.org/ American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD... http://www.asam.org/jol/journal.htm Journal of Addictive Diseases (home page) Journal of Addictive Diseases Table of Contents and Abstracts Journal of Addictive Diseases is the official journal of the American Society of Addiction Medicine and is published quarterly and provided free to ASAM members. The Journal and a... http://www.stdjournal.com/ Lippincott Williams Wilkins - Sexually Transmitted Diseases This web page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them... http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/hardin/md/micro.html http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2334/ BMC Infectious Diseases 20 February, 2002BMC Infectious DiseasesPublishing peer reviewed original research papers with open access (Submit a manuscript) BMC Infectious DiseasesBioMed... http://www.health.gov.au/pubhlth/cdi/cdihtml.htm