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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1964-04-01
    Description: Records of fertility and birth weights were examined in eight breeds of goat, indigenous to, or imported into, the subtropical environment of Israel. These included the local Syrian Mountain, Negev and Damascus breeds, and the imported Malta, Appenzeller, Saanen, Fawn German and Anglo- Nubian.All breeds of goat, local or imported, kidded at the end of winter and in early spring, and all, save the late-maturing Damascus and part of the Anglo- Nubian, kidded for the first time at the age of 1 year.In imported breeds of goat which acclimatized well in the subtropical environment fertility was not impaired.
    Print ISSN: 0021-8596
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5146
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1968-02-01
    Description: SummeryCarcass measurements were made on 24 Rambouillet lambs of different live weights but of the same age, and the lambs divided into 3 groups of 8 according to live weight. Group I, with the lowest mean live weight, had the lowest dressing percentage, relatively heaviest head and feet and lightest pelt, while group III, with the highest mean live weight, had the highest dressing percentage, the relatively lightest head and feet and the heaviest pelt of the three groups.Group I contained the lowest percentage, and group II, of medium live weight, the highest percentage of muscle, while the relative weights of bone and fat tissue were similar. Group III contained the highest percentage of fat tissue and the lowest percentage of bone. The differences in the relative weights of the edible internal organs between the three groups were not significant.Testis weight was relatively much greater in Group III than in the lighter animals. While dressing-out percentage increased with body weight, the increase was not equally distributed between fore and hindquarters. Hindquarters were relatively larger in group II than in group I; but the forequarters accounted for the greater part of the differences between groups II and III.
    Print ISSN: 0021-8596
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5146
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 1969-06-01
    Description: SUMMARYEighty-nine lactating sows, which had farrowed at least once before, were given 140 injections with 2000, 1800 or 1500 i.u. pregnant mare serum hormone. Seventy sows served as controls. 124 injections with 2000 i.u. P.M.S. were followed by 113 oestrus reactions and 88 pregnancies, and 16 injections with 1800 or 1500 i.u. by eleven instances of oestrus and six of pregnancy.Oestrus occurred in 69% of the positive reactors on the 5th day after injection, and in the rest either earlier or later. The interval between the P.M.S. injection and the onset of oestrus was similar to that between weaning and oestrus in the controls.The difference between the pregnancy rate of 71% following injection with 2000 i.u. P.M.S. and that of 83% in the control sows from the first oestrus after weaning was found to be statistically highly significant.Mean litter size and weight were not affected by different time intervals between farrowing and P.M.S. injection, nor were there any statistically significant differences in size and weight of litters at birth or at weaning at 8 weeks of age between those of hormonally treated sowsand the controls.The shortening of the farrowing interval by P.M.S. injection had no after-effect on the sizeand weight of litters subsequently obtained with or without hormone application.Injections with 1800 or 1500 i.u. P.M.S. were followed by a reduced pregnancy rate, but the few litters thus obtained were similar in mean size and weight to those obtained with 2000 i.u.or those of the controls.Sows that did not come on heat or become pregnant following P.M.S. injection came into heat at the same times after weaning of their litters as the control sows.The shortening of the farrowing interval by an average of 22 days was considered to be of sufficiently high economic value to warrant the introduction on the farm where the experiment wasconducted of the routine application of 2000 i.u. P.M.S. to all gilts and sows on the 28th day after farrowing.
    Print ISSN: 0021-8596
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5146
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 4
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    Chicago : Periodicals Archive Online (PAO)
    Agricultural History. 29:4 (1955:Oct.) 137 
    ISSN: 0002-1482
    Topics: History , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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