197 research outputs found
Possible roles, positions, factors and components of dairying in organic farming â a rewiev, mapping, survey and comparison in the Czech Republic
The full-value experiment is questionable in evaluation organic dairying. It is problem to do a trial under
comparable conditions for comparison of organic and conventional farming because of legislative reasons
and necessity of long period of such event. Most of comparisons are carried out as practice descriptive
observations and any of them has been carried out about milk production. That is main reason, why the aim of
this work is to carry out a opening of monitoring of some production conditions and results of bio-dairying in
the Czech Republic (CR). The quality aspects of sources, procedures and products are main topics of solution
of projects about organic farming philosophy, in particular in solution of organic dairy foodstuff chain. There
were choosen twelve organic dairy farms (survey II, 2006) for more detail research of production conditions
according to results of exploratory questionnaire (2006, survey I, n = 85 pieces of questionnaire and 58
organic farms, which practicise dairying) in the CR. The climatology characteristics of selected organic dairy
farms were as follows: (I) 562±149 m above sea level on the average (from 270 to 970 m a. s. l.); (II)
571.0±69.9 m above sea level, mean year temperature 6.0±1.1 ÂșC and average year rainfall sum 843.0±184.3
mm. It is clear according to previously mentioned figures that the organic (ecology) dairy farming is realized
mostly in the mountain or sub-mountain areas (less favourable areas, LFAs) as compared to climatic
conditions of CR mean profile.
The results of investigation of organic farm (E) and breeder conditions and dairy cow health state,
reproduction performance and milk quality in organic farms (I data file) as compared to conventional dairy
cow herds (K) were: milk yield (E) was 14.2±3.4 kg of milk/cow/day on average and 5165±1112 kg/cow/year;
E farms have 50 % free stables, some of them as different untraditional modifications (mostly in herds with
low number of dairy cows); it is necessary to increase this amount for welfare improvement in the future;
there are 52 % of binding stables in K herds; there (E) is high occurrence frequency of can milking
equipments (46.4 %); there are 5.4 % cases of hand milking, 21.4 % of pipeline milking equipments and 26.8
% of milking parlours; there (K) are 3 % of can milking equipments, 50 % of pipeline milking equipments
and 47 % of milking parlours; the average organic herd has 60±91 heads it means about 1/3 of K herd in the
CR; geometrical average (xg) of organic herd size is 17 heads; daily milk deliveries were 1318±1475 kg in
summer and 976±1368 kg in winter season (there is too high variability in the mentioned indicators); breed
structure of E herds is 59.8 % of Bohemian Spotted cattle, 18.8 % of Holstein (H), 12.5 % of Jersey breed; H
breed is dominating 47.5 % in K herds; average ratio of excluded milk (for secretion disorders or treatment)
is 2.99 % in E herds and 4.6 % in K herds (P<0.01); also there (E) is lower occurrence of clinical mastitis
0.53±1.97 %; service period is 124.3 days in K and 98.7±46,1 days in E herds on average (P<0.01); there (E)
is better insemination index 1.66±0.45 in comparison to K herds 2.07 (P<0.01); there is longer longevity as
duration of production life of dairy cows in E herds (6.02 lactations, âabout 141 % betterâ) in comparison to
K herds (2.50 lactations, P<0.01); milk quality showed the average total mesophilic bacteria count (CPM)
36.0±26.8 ths. CFU/ml in organic farms (E), which is comparable to the conventional farms (K); somatic cell
count (PSB) was 192±87 ths./ml in E herds and 256 ths./ml in K herds, which is in connection with the lower ratio of milk exclusion from delivery in E herds; an occurrence of residues of inhibitory substances (RIL) was
not reported in E herds, which is more advantageous in comparison to the K herds (0.16 %) and it could be
an impact of lowered antibiotica drug use; the average fat and lactose contents (T; 4.05±0.19 %) and (L;
4.83±0.15 %) are well comparable with K farms and the results show on higher energy deficiency in E herd
nutrition.
The water quality (II) is necessary in dairying as well. Drinking water is necessary for health of animals
(their watering) and for milk quality (milking equipment sanitation) as well. Drinking water is asked in dairy
farms by legislation. The E farm water quality: the nitrate level varied in the range from 1.63 to 28 mg/l with
average 10.5 mg/l in ecological farms and standard limit 50 mg/l was not exceeded; the levels of nitrite and
ammonia ions were mostly under detection limit of method; legislative limit <0.5 mg/l was not exceeded by
nitrite and once by ammonia ions 0.81 mg/l. The microbiological indicators are more sensitive of course. In
total the limits were exceeded 7Ă u in coliform bacteria, 3Ă in streptococci and Escherichia coli was
confirmed 3Ă (in comparison to demand 0). Therefore it is necessary to take care of incidental water source
sanitation.
The effect of origin of water source (communal water pipes or own well in the organic farm area) which
was used in the organic farming (II) was: the more marked result differences were not observed between own
wells (S) and communal water supply (V) in E farms; an exception was stated in insignificantly better results
of hygienic indicators of communal supply; therefore it is necessary to put the higher importance on
sanitation of own water sources. There were identified eight own wells and four communal supply. E. g.
nitrate levels were a little higher for wells 11.7 > 8.2 mg/l. The nitrites were not different. Chemical oxygen
consumption was 0.45 and 0.52 mg/l. The more expressive differences were identified in chlorides, sulphates
and Mg: 8.33 and 3.02 mg/l; 27.9 and 16.8 mg/l; 18.9 and 3.5 mg/l
A COMPARISON OF SELECTED MILK INDICATORS IN ORGANIC HERDS WITH CONVENTIONAL HERD AS REFERENCE
In a historical sense, current organic farming is an old-new
alternative under changed world conditions. Organic dairying
(O) is an alternative of friendly use of the environment in
time of presupposed global climate changes. Potential impact
of organic farming on raw cow-milk quality, composition and
properties, as conpared to conventional milk production (C),
were evaluatedin this paper on the basis of selectedm ilk indicators
(MIs). Total solids, whey volume, pH of milk fermentation
ability (FAM-pH), FAM streptococci, FAM noble lactic acid
bacteria, I and Cu were higher in C milk (P0.05) were observed in pH, rennet coagulation time, curd quality, FAM lactobacilli and streptococci/lactobacilli, Na, Mn and Zn. In general, the differences were a little more advantageous for O milk from both technological and nutritional point of view, particularly because of AS (0.461 .81m m), FAM-T (27.3 4.6 ) , Ca (1172 < l257 mg.kg-1)P, ( 950 < l004 mg. kg-1) and Mg 107.4<ll2.0mg.kg{) results. Organic milk can also produce better environment for yoghurt fermentation. Nevertheless, the results obtained should not be overestimated as both sources produced milk of good quality. Additional results are
needed to prove organic milk benefits
Gaussian process for interpreting pulsed eddy current signals for ferromagnetic pipe profiling
© 2014 IEEE. This paper describes a Gaussian Process based machine learning technique to estimate the remaining volume of cast iron in ageing water pipes. The method utilizes time domain signals produced by a commercially available pulsed Eddy current sensor. Data produced by the sensor are used to train a Gaussian Process model and perform inference of the remaining metal volume. The Gaussian Process model was learned using sensor data obtained from cast iron calibration plates of various thicknesses. Results produced by the Gaussian Process model were validated against the remaining wall thickness acquired using a high resolution laser scanner after the pipes were sandblasted to remove corrosion. The evaluation shows agreement between model outputs and ground truth. The paper concludes by discussing the implications or results and how the proposed method can potentially advance the current technological setup by facilitating real time pipe profiling
Prospectus, November 19, 1986
https://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1986/1030/thumbnail.jp
Diagnosis and management of adhesive capsulitis
Adhesive capsulitis is a musculoskeletal condition that has a disabling capability. This review discusses the diagnosis and both operative and nonoperative management of this shoulder condition that causes significant morbidity. Issues related to medications, rehabilitation, and post surgical considerations are discussed
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