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Articles 1 - 19 of 19
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Protein Plus : Increasing Summer Milk Protein Levels
Protein Plus : Increasing Summer Milk Protein Levels
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Protein Plus has commenced as a collaboration between the Department of Agriculture and the CSIRO Division of Livestock Industries. The project is aimed at investigating the causes of Western Australia's problems with low summer milk protein levels, and finding management solutions for farmers.
Cattle Production In The Gascoyne And Interior Regions Of Western Australia; A Report On The Cunyu Demographic Study (1990-1998) And The Mt Clere Producer Demonstration Site (1993-1997), Andrew Thomson
Agriculture reports
Although Producer Demonstration Sites have been staged widely in the northern parts of Australia, the events at Cunyu and Mt Clere herald a first for such an in-depth investigation in the mulga shrub lands of Western Australia.
Beef : Meating The Market, Greg Sawyer, Richard Morris, Geoff Tudor
Beef : Meating The Market, Greg Sawyer, Richard Morris, Geoff Tudor
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Nearly half of Western Australia's beef production is consumed on the domestic market, but the scene is changing rapidly.
In this article Greg Sawyer, Richard Morris and Geoff Tudor review information on production systems performance, and carcase and quality measurements that may well serve wider market opportunities in the future.
Biotechnology : Exposing The Myths & Realities, Sue Sutherland, Alan Lymbery
Biotechnology : Exposing The Myths & Realities, Sue Sutherland, Alan Lymbery
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Biotechnology has become one of the buzz words of the 1990s. Sounds impressive but what's it all about? Sue Sutherland and Alan Lymbery unravel some of the jargon and explore its potential for Western Australian agriculture.
Differences Between Merino Strains And Studs, Roger Lewer
Differences Between Merino Strains And Studs, Roger Lewer
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
When commercial wool growers select Merino rams they often use the following pattern: the buyers first consider the main strains of Merinos in Western Australia - Bungaree, Collinsville and Peppin. They then study the 550 studs and numerous non-stud ram breeders in this State. Having chosen a breeder, they examine the rams on offer and buy their annual requirements from among these. Until recently, no objective information has been available on the differences between studs and strains in Western Australia's agricultural areas. However, as part of a major study at the Department of Agriculture's Great Southern Agricultural Research Institute, these …
More Lambs : And Profit Through Breeding, L G. Butler
More Lambs : And Profit Through Breeding, L G. Butler
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
No abstract provided.
There's Still Big Money On The Sheep's Back, I G. Ralph
There's Still Big Money On The Sheep's Back, I G. Ralph
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
No abstract provided.
The Medina Pig Research Station, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
The Medina Pig Research Station, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Before the Department of Agriculture's Medina Pig Research Station was established in 1964, pig production research had been carried out on Denmark Research Station, Muresk Agricultural College and in some commercial herds.
However, with increasing specialisation in the pig industry better facilities were needed. Medina Research Station provides such facilities, allowing it to carry out research to provide detailed information of immediate practical value for both extensive and intensive pig production enterprises.
New Cattle Breeds : How Do We Use Them?, J L. Anderson
New Cattle Breeds : How Do We Use Them?, J L. Anderson
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Traditionally, beef production in Australia has been based on a few of the many breeds that developed in the United Kingdom. Pedigree breeding was used to maintain these breeds and was probably a sound policy, when combined with selection on performance, to maintain and concentrate merit in stud herds.
Emphasis on pure breeding has caused many prejudices against the practices of mixing and selection which were the original bases of breed formation.
Despite the adaptation of British breeds to the various environments in Australia there was, and still is, continuous interest in introducing other breeds of cattle to improve beef …
Basic Pig Breeding, P Mcnamara
Basic Pig Breeding, P Mcnamara
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
PROFITABLE pig raising depends on the tumoff of efficiently grown animals. Breeders should be selected for growth rate, and proper care of the breeding sow will ensure that her litters are large and healthy.
A rapid increase in the number of breeding sows in Western Australia suggests that some relatively inexperienced breeders may have started raising pigs. This article sets out the best pig breeding methods as a guide to beginners and a reminder to more experienced pig raisers.
Breeding Better Pigs, B M. Goss
Breeding Better Pigs, B M. Goss
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
IN the past, pig breeders have tended to select animals on physical characteristics, many of which have little or no relevance to economy of production.
Selection techniques now available open up the possibility of improved pig production efficiency.
Special Field Days For Merino Breeders, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Special Field Days For Merino Breeders, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
More than 200 Merino stud breeders attended special stud breeding and fertility field days arranged for them by the Department of Agriculture recently.
Breeders attending represented some 40 per cent of the State's Merino studs.
Sheep Breeding Problems In W.A. : The Industry's View, Stanley M. Dennis
Sheep Breeding Problems In W.A. : The Industry's View, Stanley M. Dennis
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
IN 1963 a short questionnaire was distributed to farmers and pastoralists seeking information about sheep breeding problems and lamb losses.
This was a fore-runner to the Department of Agriculture survey into the causes of abortion and lamb mortality which is reported elsewhere in this issue.
The Role Of Fleece Measurement In Selecting Merino Sheep, H G. Neil, R. J. Lightfoot
The Role Of Fleece Measurement In Selecting Merino Sheep, H G. Neil, R. J. Lightfoot
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
MANY things determine how much wool a sheep can grow.
These include the amount and quality of pasture available or how the sheep are fed, the stocking rate, the general health and thrift of the sheep and other management considerations such as cropping and the time of lambing.
Breeding Records For Dairy Cattle, P B. Lewis
Breeding Records For Dairy Cattle, P B. Lewis
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A N Y business needs records to show up inefficiencies and to indicate where and/or when danger points are being reached.
One record which can be of much use to the dairy farmer is the cow breeding record.
Ram Management, J Craig
Ram Management, J Craig
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
REALISING that good rams play an important role in flock improvement, the wise flock owner selects his rams after careful consideration of their breeding, type, production and fleece characters or potential meat-producing qualities.
Good ram management can have a major effect on lambing percentages. In this article Senior Veterinary Surgeon J. Craig outlines methods of achieving the best results from rams.
Grow More Wool, W L. Mcgarry, R. J. Lightfoot
Grow More Wool, W L. Mcgarry, R. J. Lightfoot
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THE amount of wool that each sheep grows is determined by many things, including the amount and quality of pasture available or how the sheep are fed, the stocking rate, the general health and thrift of the sheep and other management considerations such as cropping and the time of lambing.
Selecting And Culling Sheep Flocks, H E. Fels
Selecting And Culling Sheep Flocks, H E. Fels
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
SHEEP flocks are culled and selected for two main reasons—firstly to get immediate improvements in the present generation and secondly, to improve future generations.
Teaser (Vasectomised) Rams : A Management Advantage, W L. Mcgarry, I. K. Stott
Teaser (Vasectomised) Rams : A Management Advantage, W L. Mcgarry, I. K. Stott
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
WITH normal late spring-early summer matings (October-December) teaser rams, correctly used, will give a more concentrated lambing.
This has been shown under Western Australian conditions in trials conducted at the Wongan Hills Research Station.
In one experiment a group of 100 ewes which had one per cent, of teasers for 14 days before the fertile rams went in, dropped 42 lambs in the first two weeks of lambing, compared with 17 lambs from 100 ewes that were not teased.
The use of teasers in all Research Station flocks is now routine practice.