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Pullorum Tested Poultry Flocks, 1965, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Pullorum Tested Poultry Flocks, 1965, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
PULLORUM disease has been virtually eliminated from breeding and hatchery poultry flocks in Western Australia by the annual blood-testing of all birds and the destruction of reactors.
Pullorum Tested Poultry Flocks : 1963, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Pullorum Tested Poultry Flocks : 1963, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
PULLORUM disease has been virtually eliminated from breeding and hatchery poultry flocks in Western Australia by the annual blood-testing of all birds and the destruction of reactors.
Only 222 reactors were found in a total of 170,474 birds tested this season—an incidence of infection of only 0.13 per cent.
Pullorum Tested Poultry Flocks : 1962, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Pullorum Tested Poultry Flocks : 1962, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THIS year's pullorum tests of poultry flocks have revealed the lowest incidence of reactors since the tests began.
Results are recorded below.
Pullorum Tested Poultry Flocks : 1961, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Pullorum Tested Poultry Flocks : 1961, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THIS year's pullorum tests of poultry flocks have revealed the lowest incidence of reactors since the tests began. Results are recorded below.
Pullorum-Tested Poultry Flocks : 1960, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Pullorum-Tested Poultry Flocks : 1960, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
EARLY in 1955, an amendment to the Stock Diseases Act made blood-testing compulsory for all commercial breeding and hatchery flocks of poultry, and it was required that the incidence of infection, as determined by the last test prior to the commencement of hatching, must be less than two per cent.