52 research outputs found

    Examining the Impact of Patch Burning on Livestock Grazing Patterns in Edwards Plateau, Texas

    Get PDF
    Production of sheep, goat, and cattle are major agricultural enterprises on West Texas rangelands, especially in the Edwards Plateau. In this region, the use of fire as a management tool was suppressed until recently. Although previous studies have been conducted to evaluate cattle use of burned versus unburned patches, there has been a lack of studies where combinations of livestock species grazing together on patch burned areas have been evaluated. The objective of this study is to examine grazing patterns of cattle, sheep and goats, both spatially and temporally, on areas where patch burning has been implemented. The study site is the Texas A&M AgriLife Research Ranch, Martin Ranch, located in Mesquite-Oak-Savanna ecosystem in Menard County of Texas, USA. In February 2019 and September 2020, patch burns were implemented on the ranch and represented about 29% of the total ranch area (480 out of 1655 ha). After the burns, animals from the resident herd were randomly selected and GPS collars were placed on 34 goats, 33 sheep, and 8 cows to reflect the proportion of animals in the resident herd. The GPS collars were set to collect movement data every 10 minutes during a fourteen-month period. Gates and fences for the entire ranch were opened and livestock were free to choose areas to graze. Data from the GPS’s were evaluated to determine locations where the animals grazed and their preferences for different areas of the landscape. Initial observations indicate that cattle and sheep were more attracted by recent burned patches compared to goats. Livestock forage use patterns and time spent by species in the burned and unburned areas and among different vegetation land cover classes are presented. Information from this study will assist in providing information to producers on how implementation of patch burning would influence their management of these grazing lands

    Paradigms in multiple sclerosis: time for a change, time for a unifying concept

    Get PDF
    It has recently been suggested that, rather than being an autoimmune disease, multiple sclerosis (MS) is an example of a neurocristopathy, a pathological process resulting from a faulty development of the neural crest. Whilst several characteristics of the disease suggest a neurocristopathy, other aetiological factors require consideration, including hygiene-related factors that alter the immune responses to common pathogens resulting in an eclipse of immune reactivity that could protect against MS, the possible role of human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) in pathogenesis and autoimmune phenomena, HLA polymorphism, vitamin D levels before and after birth and immune repair mechanisms. A postulated aetiological factor in MS, associated with altered vitamin D metabolism and abnormal HERV expression, is a long-lasting disturbed redox regulation in the biosynthesis of a melanoma-like melanin pigment. Although intensive further studies on melanin pigments in nerve tissue in MS are required, the known properties of a pathological form of such pigments in melanoma could explain a number of observations in MS, including the impact of light, UV-light, and vitamin D, and could explain the clinical manifestations of MS on the basis of an oscillating process of oxidative charge and discharge of the pigments and a threshold phenomenon with a change of the quasi-catalytic function of the pigment from destroying reactive oxygen radicals or species to transforming them to more harmful long-persisting highly reactive species. Taken together with the consequences of an adaptive process in partly demyelinated neurons, resulting in an increase in number of mitochondria, and the impact of stressful life events, these conditions are necessary and sufficient to explain the disease process of MS with its spatial (plaques) and temporal (attacks and remissions) characteristics. This suggested unifying concept of the pathogenesis of MS may open perspectives for prevention, diagnosis and therapy. In particular, prevention may be achieved by vaccinating against Epstein-Barr virus in early childhood

    Plant Amines Affect Stress Related and Reproductive Hormone Release in Sheep

    No full text
    Last updated: 5/30/201

    Plant Amines Affect Stress Related and Reproductive Hormone Release in Sheep

    No full text
    Last updated: 5/30/201

    Plant Amines Can Affect Release of Luteinizing Hormone in Sheep

    No full text
    Last updated: 5/29/201
    • …
    corecore