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Books > Professional & Technical > Agriculture & farming > Animal husbandry
Poultry Breeds is a fresh field guide of feathered friends with
stunning photos highlighting the beauty and unique attributes of
104 chicken, duck, goose, and turkey breeds. Each profile outlines
the bird's history, physical characteristics, and common uses, with
specially noted fun facts sprinkled throughout. This pocket-size,
browsable guide is easy to use, and author Carol Ekarius knows her
birds: she has been writing about livestock for nearly 20 years and
has raised her own for decades.
Can we improve the health and welfare of livestock while increasing
production? Can we maintain animal biodiversity in the face of
increasing demands for resources and expanding agriculture? Can we
use animal behaviour to reduce the carbon footprint of livestock
production? Applied ethology is a young, multidisciplinary science
that is relevant to these and other pressing issues.This book
celebrates the history and science of applied ethology, and
commemorates the 50th anniversary of the International Society for
Applied Ethology. Through themes such as human-animal interaction,
play behaviour, cognition, evolutionary theory and the relationship
between applied ethology and animal welfare science, the book
examines why ethologists are so passionate about their work, and
why this field remains more exciting now than ever. Chapter authors
include world renowned ethologists such as Don Broom, Ian Duncan,
Ruth Newberry, and many others. The history of the ISAE and
development of the field is presented with engaging profiles of
founding members and pioneers in the field. New methods and
emerging issues in behaviour research are discussed, along with the
development of ethology around the globe. The book concludes with
thoughts on future directions for applied ethology in addressing
global issues of animal production, welfare, biodiversity, and the
role of the ISAE.The book provides an exciting overview of this
emerging field of science, and is intended for academics, students
and anyone who takes pleasure in observing animals.
The supply of new innovative precision dairy farming technologies
is steadily increasing. It aims to help farmers to be more labour
efficient and to support them in their daily management decisions.
At the same time, since many technologies are developed from an
engineering perspective, adoption of these technologies is
sometimes limited since knowledge on economic benefits and farmers'
needs is often incomplete.This book covers the current status of
precision dairy farming technologies and what farmers expect from
them. It also includes insights and future perspectives on
managing, analysing, and combining sensor information. Moreover,
new innovative ideas that may better fit farmers' needs and
expectation are introduced, ranging from technologies or
innovations that aim at improved animal health and welfare, to
those technologies that result in a more efficient use of feed and
improved grazing management.This book is unique because science and
engineering are combined to develop precision dairy farming
technologies that are to be applied in practice. The book will
serve as a stepping stone for new and innovative ideas within this
rapidly growing area within dairy farming.
With good planning and preparation, your goats will be healthier
and happier. Everything you Never thought you'd Need to Know About
Goats provides advice before you get goats and afterwards. Topics
include Herd Management, Nutrition, Breeding, Pregnancy and
Kidding, Bottle Babies, Meat and Dairy Goats, Diseases and
Illnesses, and Antibiotics and General Medications. It also
provides a listing of useful resources and a glossary of terms
often heard in the goat world.
You might have heard that bees are in trouble -- but in fact, the
trouble is coming our way too and bees are just showing it first.
The looming environmental crisis means that, as a result of modern
agricultural practices and pesticide,s we may well fail to prevent
honeybee collapse. Honeybees are vital to the health of our planet,
and this book is designed to equip and encourage small-scale
backyard beekeepers -- who may end up having the only strong,
healthy honeybees left. An expert beekeeper, Jack Bresette-Mills
calls his approach 'sensitive beekeeping'. He promotes beekeeping
without fear, beekeeping for the sake of the bee rather than for
profit, and learning to answer your own questions about beekeeping.
It's an approach that takes time, practice and patience to develop,
and requires physical, mental and spiritual transformation. In the
long run though, it results in healthier, sustainable hives and a
happier beekeeper.
India Basin Triangle is a crime novel in the San Francisco Noir
tradition. Based on an actual case involving international drug
traffickers in the rollicking 1980s, the story juxtaposes the
thoughts and actions of three main characters as they move
inevitably toward a final collision that is quietly orchestrated by
a mysterious woman. Henry Acuna, the dedicated, straight-shooting
FBI agent in charge is one angle of the triangle. Jairo Restrepo,
the cunning and intelligent Colombian drug lord is another. And
Jack Lauer, a neer-de-well, good time Charley ex-Navy Seal
completes the pyramid and creates a snapshot of the era. San
Fracisco, Costa Rica and an exotic Caribbean island form the
backdrop for this journey to a spider web of political intrigue and
ambiguity, moral relativism and unbridled hedonism. E-book version
is also available for both (Amazon) Kindle and (Barnes & Noble)
Nook for $7.99.
Before crude oil and the combustion engine, the industrialized
world relied on a different kind of power - the power of the horse.
Horses in Society is the story of horse production in the United
States, Britain, and Canada at the height of the species'
usefulness, the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century.
Margaret E. Derry shows how horse breeding practices used during
this period to heighten the value of the animals in the marketplace
incorporated a intriguing cross section of influences, including
Mendelism, eugenics, and Darwinism. Derry elucidates the
increasingly complex horse world by looking at the international
trade in army horses, the regulations put in place by different
countries to enforce better horse breeding, and general aspects of
the dynamics of the horse market. Because it is a story of how
certain groups attempted to control the market for horses, by
protecting their breeding activities or 'patenting' their work,
Horses in Society provides valuable background information to the
rapidly developing present-day problem of biological ownership.
Derry's fascinating study is also a story of the evolution of
animal medicine and humanitarian movements, and of international
relations, particularly between Canada and the United States.
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