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Confrontations And Donation: Encounters Between Homeless Pet Owners And The Public, Leslie Irvine, Jesse M. Smith, Kristina N. Kahl 2011 University of Colorado Boulder

Confrontations And Donation: Encounters Between Homeless Pet Owners And The Public, Leslie Irvine, Jesse M. Smith, Kristina N. Kahl

Leslie Irvine, PhD

This study examines the interactions between homeless pet owners and the domiciled public with a focus on how the activities of pet ownership help construct positive personal identities. Homeless people are often criticized for having pets. They counter these attacks using open and contained responses to stigmatization. More often, they redefine pet ownership to incorporate how they provide for their animals, challenging definitions that require a physical home. Homeless pet owners thus create a positive moral identity by emphasizing that they feed their animals first and give them freedom that the pets of the domiciled lack. Through what we call …


A Scientific Mystery: Do Wild Baboons Kidnap Puppies For Pets?, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

A Scientific Mystery: Do Wild Baboons Kidnap Puppies For Pets?, Harold Herzog

Interactive Behavior Collection

Do wild baboons really keep puppies for pets?


A Scientific Mystery: Do Wild Baboons Kidnap Puppies For Pets?, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

A Scientific Mystery: Do Wild Baboons Kidnap Puppies For Pets?, Harold Herzog

Harold Herzog, PhD

Do wild baboons really keep puppies for pets?


The Animal Research Paradox, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

The Animal Research Paradox, Harold Herzog

Laboratory Research and Animal Welfare Collection

Does empathy give rats moral standing?


The Animal Research Paradox, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

The Animal Research Paradox, Harold Herzog

Harold Herzog, PhD

Does empathy give rats moral standing?


Forbidden Foods: Does Loving Pets Make It Easier To Eat Meat?, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

Forbidden Foods: Does Loving Pets Make It Easier To Eat Meat?, Harold Herzog

Dietary Choice and Foods of Animal Origin Collection

A new theory of meat taboos.


Forbidden Foods: Does Loving Pets Make It Easier To Eat Meat?, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

Forbidden Foods: Does Loving Pets Make It Easier To Eat Meat?, Harold Herzog

Harold Herzog, PhD

A new theory of meat taboos.


Economic Contribution Of The Agricultural Sector To The Arkansas Economy In 2009, Katherine McGraw, Jennie Popp, Wayne Miller 2011 University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

Economic Contribution Of The Agricultural Sector To The Arkansas Economy In 2009, Katherine Mcgraw, Jennie Popp, Wayne Miller

Research Reports and Research Bulletins

This report is the sixth in a series of reports examining agriculture’s economic contribution on the Arkansas economy. Utilizing data from the United States Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), USDA Economic Research Service (ERS), USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), and Minnesota IMPLAN Group, Inc. (MIG), the economic contribution of agriculture on the Arkansas economy was estimated for the most recent year available, 2009. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by State information for Arkansas in 2009 was compared with those of other states in the southeast U.S. to give a measure of the relative importance of agriculture in Arkansas.2 The total …


Animal Pain: What It Is And Why It Matters, Bernard E. Rollin 2011 Colorado State University

Animal Pain: What It Is And Why It Matters, Bernard E. Rollin

Animal Welfare Collection

The basis of having a direct moral obligation to an entity is that what we do to that entity matters to it. The ability to experience pain is a sufficient condition for a being to be morally considerable. But the ability to feel pain is not a necessary condition for moral considerability. Organisms could have possibly evolved so as to be motivated to flee danger or injury or to eat or drink not by pain, but by ‘‘pangs of pleasure’’ that increase as one fills the relevant need or escapes the harm. In such a world, ‘‘mattering’’ would be positive, …


A Non-Invasive Assay For Monitoring Stress Responses: A Comparison Between Wild And Captive-Reared Rainbowfish (Melanoteania Duboulayi), Amina Zuberi, Sinan Ali, Culum Brown 2011 Macquarie University

A Non-Invasive Assay For Monitoring Stress Responses: A Comparison Between Wild And Captive-Reared Rainbowfish (Melanoteania Duboulayi), Amina Zuberi, Sinan Ali, Culum Brown

Aquaculture Collection

The stress response of wild and captive reared rainbowfish (Melanoteania duboulayi) following chasing by a simulated predator was examined. Cortisol release rate was monitored using a flow through system by measuring water borne hormone levels. Tests using known cortisol concentrations revealed that the technique yielded 95% of the cortisol present in the water. Cortisol release rates increased several fold in both populations after being chased but peaked at different time periods. Wild fish showed a typical stress response with release rate rising to (2.29±0.22 ng g−1 h−1) 2 h after exposure followed by rapid recovery. The captive-reared …


Lessons From Chimpanzee-Based Research On Human Disease: The Implications Of Genetic Differences, Jarrod Bailey 2011 New England Anti-Vivisection Society

Lessons From Chimpanzee-Based Research On Human Disease: The Implications Of Genetic Differences, Jarrod Bailey

Laboratory Experiments Collection

Assertions that the use of chimpanzees to investigate human diseases is valid scientifically are frequently based on a reported 98–99% genetic similarity between the species. Critical analyses of the relevance of chimpanzee studies to human biology, however, indicate that this genetic similarity does not result in sufficient physiological similarity for the chimpanzee to constitute a good model for research, and furthermore, that chimpanzee data do not translate well to progress in clinical practice for humans. Leading examples include the minimal citations of chimpanzee research that is relevant to human medicine, the highly different pathology of HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C virus …


New Books For Intelligent Animal Lovers, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

New Books For Intelligent Animal Lovers, Harold Herzog

Human-Animal Bonds Collection

New books for animal lovers.


New Books For Intelligent Animal Lovers, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

New Books For Intelligent Animal Lovers, Harold Herzog

Harold Herzog, PhD

New books for animal lovers.


Was Hitler A Vegetarian? The Paradox Of The Nazi Animal Protection Movement, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

Was Hitler A Vegetarian? The Paradox Of The Nazi Animal Protection Movement, Harold Herzog

Dietary Choice and Foods of Animal Origin Collection

What can we learn from Hitler's love of animals?


Was Hitler A Vegetarian? The Paradox Of The Nazi Animal Protection Movement, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

Was Hitler A Vegetarian? The Paradox Of The Nazi Animal Protection Movement, Harold Herzog

Harold Herzog, PhD

What can we learn from Hitler's love of animals?


Learned Recognition And Avoidance Of Invasive Mosquitofish By The Shrimp, Paratya Australiensis, Joshua D. Bool, Kristen Whitcomb, Erin Kydd, Culum Brown 2011 Macquarie University

Learned Recognition And Avoidance Of Invasive Mosquitofish By The Shrimp, Paratya Australiensis, Joshua D. Bool, Kristen Whitcomb, Erin Kydd, Culum Brown

Sentience Collection

Little is known about the learning ability of crustaceans, especially with respect to their anti-predator responses to invasive species. In many vertebrates, anti-predator behaviour is influenced by experience during ontogeny. Here, predator-naïve glass shrimp (Paratya australiensisis) were exposed to a predatory, invasive fish species, Gambusia holbrooki, to determine whether shrimp could learn to: (1) avoid the scent of Gambusia via classical conditioning; and (2) restrict their activity patterns to the night to reduce predatory encounters. Conditioned shrimp were placed in containers in aquaria containing Gambusia for 3 days during which time they could be harassed but not consumed by Gambusia. …


Four Types Of Activities That Affect Animals: Implications For Animal Welfare Science And Animal Ethics Philosophy, D. Fraser, A. M. MacRae 2011 University of British Columbia

Four Types Of Activities That Affect Animals: Implications For Animal Welfare Science And Animal Ethics Philosophy, D. Fraser, A. M. Macrae

Ethnozoology and Animal Welfare Collection

People affect animals through four broad types of activity: (1) people keep companion, farm, laboratory and captive wild animals, often while using them for some purpose; (2) people cause deliberate harm to animals through activities such as slaughter, pest control, hunting, and toxicology testing; (3) people cause direct but unintended harm to animals through crop production, transportation, night-time lighting, and many other human activities; and (4) people harm animals indirectly by disturbing ecological systems and the processes of nature, for example by destroying habitat, introducing foreign species, and causing pollution and climate change. Each type of activity affects vast numbers …


The Evolution Of Lateralized Foot Use In Parrots: A Phylogenetic Approach, Culum Brown, Maria Magat 2011 Macquarie University

The Evolution Of Lateralized Foot Use In Parrots: A Phylogenetic Approach, Culum Brown, Maria Magat

Sentience Collection

Cerebral lateralization refers to the division of cognitive function in either brain hemisphere and may be overtly expressed as behavioral asymmetries, such as handedness. The evolutionary history of laterality is of considerable interest due to its close link with the development of human language. Although considerable research effort has aimed at the proximate explanations of cerebral lateralization, considerably less attention has been paid to ultimate explanations. The extent to which laterality is constrained by phylogeny or shaped by ecological forces through natural selection has received little attention. Here, the foot preference of 23 species of Australian parrots was examined to …


Why Do Chicks Like Music? Why Does Any One?, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

Why Do Chicks Like Music? Why Does Any One?, Harold Herzog

Psychology Collection

Barry Manilow explained?


Why Do Chicks Like Music? Why Does Any One?, Harold Herzog 2011 Animal Studies Repository

Why Do Chicks Like Music? Why Does Any One?, Harold Herzog

Harold Herzog, PhD

Barry Manilow explained?


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