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Sheep growth

Nsahlai IV, Green H, Bradford M, Bonsi MLK (2002) The influence of source and level of protein, and implantation with zeranol on sheep growth. Livestock Prod Sci 74 103-112 Parry DW, Jenkinson P, McLeod L (1995) Fusarium ear blight (scab) in small-grain cereals - a review. Plant Pathol 44 207-238... [Pg.434]

Bovine or sheep growth hormone is ineffective in human and monkey, but the species specificity is not as rigid as one would expect from that example. Bovine growth hormone is very effective in fish and rat. Furthermore, the rat also responds to monkey and human hormone. This led to Li s suggestion that both bovine and human hormones contain a common core that includes the active center, and that the common core could be isolated by the appropriate degradation procedure. [Pg.427]

Integration of the Small Ruminant Nutrition System and of the UC Davis sheep growth model for improved gain predictions... [Pg.553]

The polyether antibiotics exhibit a broad range of biological, antibacterial, antifungal, antiviral, anticoccidial, antiparasitic, and insecticidal activities. They improve feed efficiency and growth performance in mminant and monogastric animals. Only the anticoccidial activity in poultry and catde, and the effect on feed efficiency in mminants such as catde and sheep are of commercial interest. [Pg.171]

Cobalt is one of twenty-seven known elements essential to humans (28) (see Mineral NUTRIENTS). It is an integral part of the cyanocobalamin [68-19-9] molecule, ie, vitamin B 2> only documented biochemically active cobalt component in humans (29,30) (see Vitamins, VITAMIN Vitamin B 2 is not synthesized by animals or higher plants, rather the primary source is bacterial flora in the digestive system of sheep and cattle (8). Except for humans, nonmminants do not appear to requite cobalt. Humans have between 2 and 5 mg of vitamin B22, and deficiency results in the development of pernicious anemia. The wasting disease in sheep and cattle is known as bush sickness in New Zealand, salt sickness in Florida, pine sickness in Scotland, and coast disease in AustraUa. These are essentially the same symptomatically, and are caused by cobalt deficiency. Symptoms include initial lack of appetite followed by scaliness of skin, lack of coordination, loss of flesh, pale mucous membranes, and retarded growth. The total laboratory synthesis of vitamin B 2 was completed in 65—70 steps over a period of eleven years (31). The complex stmcture was reported by Dorothy Crowfoot-Hodgkin in 1961 (32) for which she was awarded a Nobel prize in 1964. [Pg.379]

The advantages of recombinant DNA technology are enormous, as the following example shows. Somatostatin is a hormone that inhibits the secretion of pituitary growth hormone. The researchers who first isolated somatostatin required nearly half a million sheep brairrs to produce 5 mg of the substance. Using a chemically synthesized gene, 9... [Pg.453]

The most satisfactory method for the organic farmer to reduce the risk of infection to lambs from internal parasites is to practise clean grazing, which reduces parasitic infection and increases lamb growth rate (Fig. 3.5). The most effective method of clean grazing is, as we have seen, to use a three year rotational system with sheep, followed by cattle, and then arable. This presupposes land that can be ploughed. On permanent pasture farms with no arable, beef and sheep should be alternated. To make this effective, it helps if there are as many beef livestock units as sheep. If the farm contains only sheep, then it is advisable to alternate on an annual basis between ewes with twins and ewes with singles. If the flock normally produces mostly... [Pg.57]

Over a long time period it may well not be possible to duplicate library cell culture conditions. What happens when the lot of media used in the final culture step prior to pyrolysis has been consumed Can culture media suppliers assure nutritional identity between batches Media types for growth of fastidious strains invariably include natural products such as brewer s yeast, tryptic soy, serum, egg, chocolate, and/or sheep blood. Trace components in natural products cannot be controlled to assure an infinite, invariable supply. The microtiter plate wells used here do not hold much media. Even so, the day will come when all media supplies are consumed and a change in batch is unavoidable. When that happens, if there were no effective way to compensate spectra for the resulting distortions, it would be necessary to re-culture and re-analyze replicates for every strain in the reference library. Until recently the potential for obsolescence was a major disincentive for developing PyMS spectral libraries of bacteria. Why this is no longer an insurmountable problem is discussed in the next section. [Pg.109]

Adverse effects of copper deficiency can be documented in terrestrial plants and invertebrates, poultry, small laboratory animals, livestock — especially ruminants — and humans. Data are scarce or missing on copper deficiency effects in aquatic plants and animals and in avian and mammalian wildlife. Copper deficiency in sheep, the most sensitive ruminant mammal, is associated with depressed growth, bone disorders, depigmentation of hair or wool, abnormal wool growth, fetal death and resorption, depressed estrous, heart failure, cardiovascular defects, gastrointestinal disturbances, swayback, pathologic lesions, and degeneration of the motor tracts of the spinal cord (NAS 1977). [Pg.171]


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Growth hormone, bovine sheep

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