3,536 research outputs found
Analysis of the Management and Costs Associated with Rearing Pregnant Dairy Heifers in the UK from Conception to Calving
Good management of the pregnant heifer is crucial to ensure that she is well grown and healthy and calves down easily before joining the milking herd. This study collected primary data on all aspects of heifer management on 101 UK farms during heifer pregnancy from conception to calving including farm factors and associated costs of system inputs. A cost analysis workbook was developed to calculate the cost of rearing per heifer for each of the study farms. Associations between cost of rearing and farms factors were determined using linear regression and analysis of variance. Heifers had a mean age of conception of 509 d (range 365 - 700 d) and an age at first calving of 784 d (range 639 - 973 d). The mean total cost of rearing during pregnancy was £450.36 (range £153.11 to £784.00) with a mean daily cost of £1.64 (range £0.56 to £2.86). The inputs contributing the most to cost were feed (32.7%), labour (23.8%) and slurry disposal (11.2%). Total purchased and homegrown feed and grazing contributed between 25.5% and 65.4% of total costs with a mean contribution of 43.6%. The cost of rearing was lowest in spring calving herds and highest in all year round calving herds with intermediate values in autumn and multi block calving herds. The main variables influencing the cost were the number of days spent at grass, age at first calving, calving pattern, breed, herd size and region. Each extra day in age at first calving increased the mean cost of rearing during pregnancy by £0.33/d whereas every extra day at grass reduced the cost by £1.75/d
A Study of Dairy Heifer Rearing Practices from Birth to Weaning and Their Associated Costs on UK Dairy Farms
There are many inputs into the dairy replacement herd which impact not only on the cost of rearing heifers from birth to first calving, but also on their future longevity and production potential. This study determined the current cost of rearing dairy heifers in the UK through the calculation and analysis of individual costs on a subset of 102 UK dairy farms. Each farm was visited and an extensive heifer rearing questionnaire was completed. Current heifer rearing practices were recorded to provide insight into critical management decisions. A cost analysis workbook was developed to calculate the costs of inputs in the pre-weaning period for labour, calving, feed, housing, health treatments and vaccinations, waste storage, machinery and equipment, and utilities. The average age at weaning was 62 d. The mean cost of rearing from birth to weaning was £195.19 per heifer with a mean daily cost of £3.14 (excluding the opportunity cost of the calf). This ranged from £1.68 to £6.11 among farms, reflecting major differences in management strategies and efficiency. The highest contribution to total costs came from feed (colostrum, milk, starter and forage) at 48.5% with milk feeding making up the greatest proportion of this at 37.3%. The next major expenses were bedding and labour, contributing 12.3% and 11.2% respectively. Unsurprisingly, delaying age at weaning increased total cost by £3.53 per day. Total costs were on average 45% higher on organic farms than conventional due to higher feed costs and later weaning. Calving pattern also had a strong association with the total cost being lowest with spring calving, intermediate with autumn calving and highest in multi block and all year round calving herds.fals
The management and associated costs of rearing heifers on UK dairy farms from weaning to conception
Dairy heifers only start to produce a return on investment at first calving. The length of the nonproductive rearing period is largely governed by farmer decisions on plane of nutrition and reproduction management. Primary data were collected from 101 dairy farms and a cost analysis workbook developed to calculate individual inputs in each of three periods to determine which management decisions and farm factors have the greatest influence on the total costs associated with rearing. This paper covers weaning until conception. Heifers were weaned at 62 d (range 42 - 112 d) and conceived by 509 d (range 365 - 700 d) giving an average weaning to conception period of 447 ± 60 d (range 253 to 630 d). The mean daily cost of rearing during this period was £1.65 (range £0.75 to £2.97 on different farms) giving a mean total cost of £745.94 per heifer (range £295.32 to £1745.85). This large variation was mostly due to the duration, which was mainly determined by age at first breeding (mean 476 days, range 365 - 700 d). The main contributors to total costs were feed (35.6%), labour (24.7%) and bedding (8.9%). The variables most strongly associated with the total costs were age at conception, calving pattern and breed. A multivariable model predicted an increase in mean cost of £2.26 for each extra day in age at conception. The total cost was highest in herds with all year round calving, intermediate in multi-block and lowest in spring and autumn calving herds, with Friesian x and Jersey herds having the lowest cost of rearing.falsePublished onlin
Non-abelian D=11 Supermembrane
We obtain a U(M) action for supermembranes with central charges in the Light
Cone Gauge (LCG). The theory realizes all of the symmetries and constraints of
the supermembrane together with the invariance under a U(M) gauge group with M
arbitrary. The worldvolume action has (LCG) N=8 supersymmetry and it
corresponds to M parallel supermembranes minimally immersed on the target M9xT2
(MIM2). In order to ensure the invariance under the symmetries and to close the
corresponding algebra, a star-product determined by the central charge
condition is introduced. It is constructed with a nonconstant symplectic
two-form where curvature terms are also present. The theory is in the strongly
coupled gauge-gravity regime. At low energies, the theory enters in a
decoupling limit and it is described by an ordinary N=8 SYM in the IR phase for
any number of M2-branes.Comment: Contribution to the Proceedings of the Dubna International SQS'09
Workshop ("Supersymmetries and Quantum Symmetries-2009", July 29 - August 3,
2009. 12pg, Late
D=11 Supermembrane wrapped on calibrated submanifolds
We construct the Hamiltonian of the D=11 Supermembrane with topological
conditions on configuration space. It may be interpreted as a supermembrane
theory where all configurations are wrapped in an irreducible way on a
calibrated submanifold of a compact sector of the target space. We prove that
the spectrum of its Hamiltonian is discrete with finite multiplicity. The
construction is explicitly perfomed for a compact sector of the target space
being a dimensional flat torus and the base manifold of the Supermembrane
a genus compact Riemann surface. The topological conditions on
configuration space work in such a way that the case may be interpreted
as the intersection of two D=11 Supermembranes over surfaces, with their
corresponding topological conditions. The discreteness of the spectrum is
preserved by the intersection procedure. Between the configurations satisfying
the topological conditions there are minimal configurations which describe
minimal immersions from the base manifold to the compact sector of the target
space. They allow to map the D=11 Supermembrane with topological conditions to
a symplectic noncommutative Yang-Mills theory. We analyze geometrical
properties of these configurations in the context of Supermembranes and
D-branes theories. We show that this class of configurations also minimizes the
Hamiltonian of D-branes theories.Comment: 24 page
The evolution of parental care strategies in subsocial wasps
This is the final version. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Code accessibility Code used for this study will be archived on Dryad
digital repository on acceptance.Data accessibility All data will be archived on Dryad digital repository on
acceptance.Insect parental care strategies are particularly diverse, and prolonged association between parents and offspring may be a key
precursor to the evolution of complex social traits. Macroevolutionary patterns remain obscure, however, due to the few rigorous
phylogenetic analyses. The subsocial sphecid wasps are a useful group in which to study parental care because of the diverse
range of strategies they exhibit. These strategies range from placing a single prey item in a pre-existing cavity to mass provisioning a pre-built nest, through to complex progressive provisioning where a female feeds larvae in different nests simultaneously as they grow. We show that this diversity stems from multiple independent transitions between states. The strategies we
focus on were previously thought of in terms of a stepping-stone model in which complexity increases during evolution, ending
with progressive provisioning which is a likely precursor to eusociality. We find that evolution has not always followed this
model: reverse transitions are common, and the ancestral state is the most flexible rather than the simplest strategy. Progressive
provisioning has evolved several times independently, but transitions away from it appear rare. We discuss the possibility that
ancestral plasticity has played a role in the evolution of extended parental care
A General Framework for Sound and Complete Floyd-Hoare Logics
This paper presents an abstraction of Hoare logic to traced symmetric
monoidal categories, a very general framework for the theory of systems. Our
abstraction is based on a traced monoidal functor from an arbitrary traced
monoidal category into the category of pre-orders and monotone relations. We
give several examples of how our theory generalises usual Hoare logics (partial
correctness of while programs, partial correctness of pointer programs), and
provide some case studies on how it can be used to develop new Hoare logics
(run-time analysis of while programs and stream circuits).Comment: 27 page
Missing children: risks, repeats and responses
Investigating reports of missing children is a major source of demand for the police in the UK. Repeat disappearances are common, can indicate underlying vulnerabilities and have been linked with various forms of exploitation and abuse. Inspired by research on repeat victimisation, this paper examines the prevalence and temporal patterns of repeat missing episodes by children, as well as the characteristics of those involved. Using data on all missing children incidents recorded by one UK police service in 2015 (n = 3352), we find that: (a) 75% of missing incidents involving children were repeats, i.e. attributed to children who had already been reported missing in 2015; (b) a small proportion of repeatedly missing children (n = 59; 4%) accounted for almost a third of all missing children incidents (n = 952, 28%); (c) over half of all first repeat disappearances occurred within four weeks of an initial police recorded missing episode; and (d) children recorded as missing ten times or more over the one year study period were significantly more likely than those recorded missing once to be teenagers, in the care system or to have drug and/or alcohol dependencies. We conclude by discussing the implications of our findings for future research and the prevention of repeat disappearances by childre
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