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- Beef cattle (54)
- Western Australia (45)
- Grazing (23)
- Cattle (21)
- Wheat (17)
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- Beef (15)
- Forage (15)
- Consumer (12)
- Ground beef (11)
- Growing cattle (11)
- Soybeans (11)
- Bermudagrass (10)
- Grain sorghum (10)
- Fescue (9)
- Limit feeding (9)
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- Palatability (8)
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- Soil (8)
- Water management (8)
- Corn (6)
- Cropping systems (6)
- Essential oils (6)
- Feedlot (6)
- Prescribed fire (6)
- Beef production (5)
- Crabgrass (5)
- Degree of doneness (5)
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- Publication Year
- Publication
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- Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Reports (165)
- Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4 (58)
- Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 3 (3)
- The Journal of Extension (3)
- Journal of Applied Communications (2)
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- Poisonous Plant Research (PPR) (2)
- Discovery, The Student Journal of Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences (1)
- Human–Wildlife Interactions (1)
- Journal of Amish and Plain Anabaptist Studies (1)
- Journal of Bioresource Management (1)
- Journal of the Minnesota Academy of Science (1)
- Professional Agricultural Workers Journal (1)
- SURE Journal: Science Undergraduate Research Experience Journal (1)
- The Philippine Agricultural Scientist (1)
- WRIT: Journal of First-Year Writing (1)
Articles 241 - 242 of 242
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
More Beef From The Kimberleys, Grant A. Smith
More Beef From The Kimberleys, Grant A. Smith
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 3
Beef production in the Kimberleys is an industry which has eked out a precarious existence for many years. Today it is offered an unprecedented opportunity for expansion on sound economic lines, and it is the purpose of this article to offer some suggestions as to how this may best be achieved.
[Part 1 of ongoing series of articles]
Studies Of Prenatal Development In Farm Animals, L. M. Winters
Studies Of Prenatal Development In Farm Animals, L. M. Winters
Journal of the Minnesota Academy of Science
The central objective of these studies has been to gather as accurate data as possible regarding normal prenatal development in farm animals. Once this is established as a base we or other workers will be in a position to study the specific effects of unfavorable environments, such as deficiency rations, excess fat, etc. Our work has progressed far enough so that we are now incorporating some of the latter in our studies.