Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Digital Commons Network

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network

Rr13-02 Corn Grain Hybrid Tests In Tennessee 2012, Fred L. Allen, Richard D. Johnson, Robert C. Williams Jr., Angela Thompson Mcclure Dec 2012

Rr13-02 Corn Grain Hybrid Tests In Tennessee 2012, Fred L. Allen, Richard D. Johnson, Robert C. Williams Jr., Angela Thompson Mcclure

Field & Commercial Crops

No abstract provided.


Buying And Selling Corn Silage Or Other High Moisture Feeds: Value The Feed Not The Water, Dillon Feuz, Clark Israelsen, Allen Young, Lyle Holmgren Jul 2012

Buying And Selling Corn Silage Or Other High Moisture Feeds: Value The Feed Not The Water, Dillon Feuz, Clark Israelsen, Allen Young, Lyle Holmgren

All Current Publications

Questions often arise among growers who have corn silage or alfalfa silage (haylage) to sell and dairy producers and feedlot operators who are looking to buy those feeds as to how to establish a fair price. Because of the high moisture content of these feeds (50-75% water) and other similar feeds (barley silage, oat silage, sorghum silage and wheat silage) the transportation costs are rather substantial relative to the value of the feed.


Sp618-2011 Corn, Sweet Sorghum And Small Grain Silage Tests In Tennessee 2011, Fred L. Allen, Richard Johnson, Virginia Sykes Jan 2012

Sp618-2011 Corn, Sweet Sorghum And Small Grain Silage Tests In Tennessee 2011, Fred L. Allen, Richard Johnson, Virginia Sykes

Field & Commercial Crops

No abstract provided.


Superweeds And Suspect Seeds: Does The Genetically-Engineered Crop Deregulation Process Put American Agriculture At Risk, Margaret Sova Mccabe Jan 2012

Superweeds And Suspect Seeds: Does The Genetically-Engineered Crop Deregulation Process Put American Agriculture At Risk, Margaret Sova Mccabe

Law Faculty Scholarship

The federal government’s regulatory approach to genetically engineered (GE) crops, known as “The Framework”, is now twenty-five years old. Despite two and half decades of a consistent regulatory regime, GE crop and food regulation remains controversial. This article suggests that regulatory science and its tenets of independence, transparency, and public science should guide reforms of The Framework so that it is an efficient and reliable regulatory system. The article has four parts: 1) it provides a brief overview of the history of GE crop regulation; 2)it describes the key attributes of The Framework and related regulatory documents, with particular focus …