520 research outputs found

    Boosting the Quality and Safety of Specialty Mushrooms

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    Selling Homemade Food Products in New Hampshire The Basics - Part Two

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    Selling Homemade Food Products in New Hampshire The Basics - Part Three

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    Harvest and Post-Harvest Agricultural Water Testing for New Hampshire Produce Farms

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    DIY Handwashing Stations

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    DIY Handwashing Stations

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    Selling Homemade Food Products in New Hampshire The Basics - Part Three

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    Behavioural studies on some Rhodesian Rodents

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    Field studies (Lake Kariba shoreline and Salisbury) and experiments with a captive colony of 12 species of Rhodesian rodents were undertaken for a period of three years. Comparative behavioural data are presented here with special reference to den and nest behaviour, group and territorial behaviour, reproductive and juvenile behaviour, and activity pattern. No species was found to be truly gregarious except Dendromus mesomelas, but Praomys (Mastomys) natalensis, Lemniscomys griselda, Tatera leucogaster, and Aethomys chrysophilus were found to tolerate crowded conditions in captivity. Nipple dragging of young was found in both species of Aethomys and in Acomys, with the remainder observed to utilise mouth carrying behaviour. It was noted that especially in  Rhabdomys  and Praomys (Mastomysj, and also in Lemniscomys,young have a strong tendency to scatter in all directions from a disturbed nest, even before their eyes open. The significance of nipple dragging, scattering and crowding behaviour and correlation to survival and tendency to irrupt are discussed. All species were found to be nocturnal (usually with irregular sub cycles of activity) except Rhabdomys (largely diurnal), Lemniscomys(diurnal/crepuscular) and Otomys (nocturnal/crepuscular)

    Perceptions of Current Tipping Customs and Feasibility of a No-Tip Policy in a Micropolitan Area of Texas

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    The purpose of this research is to examine the issues surrounding the recent trend to establish a no-tipping policy in American full-service restaurants. Most businesses experimenting with alternative tipping policies are in metropolitan areas, so this research attempts to examine a micropolitan city’s perspective on tip and no-tip policies in full-service restaurants in the area

    Mammals of Spanish Peaks State Wildlife Area, Colorado

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    Habitats and relative abundance of small mammals in the Spanish Peaks State Wildlife Area in western Las Animas Co., Colorado, were assessed. A total of 821 mammals of 20 species was collected in 2750 trapnights between 31 May and 19 August of 1981. Eight additional species of mammals were observed on the wildlife area but not documented. The deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus) and rock mouse (P. difficilis) were the most abundant small mammals, accounting for 63 and 16%, respectively, of the total catch. The deer mouse was the only species caught in every habitat sampled. Abert\u27s squirrel (Sciurus abert,) previously has not been recorded in Colorado from as far southeast as the Spanish Peaks State Wildlife Area. The mammalian fauna of Colorado has been the subject of numerous studies since the late 1800s. Early studies were by Cockerell (1890), Warren (1906), Cary (1911), and Warren (1942, published posthumously). More recent investigations include the book by Lechleitner (1969), the exhaustive compilation by Armstrong (1972), and the latilong surveys by Bissell (1978, 1982). In spite of these studies, several regions of Colorado remain poorly represented in collections. Armstrong (1972) noted that certain poorly surveyed parts of the western two-thirds of the state appear to me to be ... significant from the standpoint of zoogeography. Western Las Animas County--the Park Plateau and Culebra Range [of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains]--is such an area. In a later publication, Armstrong et al. (1973) noted that additional field investigations were needed in the vicinity of the Wet Mountains, a biogeographically important region where several species of grassland mammals reach altitudinal extremes and certain southern species reach northern limits. With this in mind, the Colorado Division of Wildlife initiated fieldwork in the Spanish Peaks State Wildlife Area to sample the vertebrate fauna in general and to assess habitat associations and relative abundance of small mammals in particular. This report documents the mammals collected and observed in the Spanish Peaks State Wildlife Area during summer of 1981 and summarizes biological data on mammals obtained at that time.https://scholars.fhsu.edu/fort_hays_studies_series/1067/thumbnail.jp
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