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  • Overcoming immune suppression to fight against bovine leukemia

    Overcoming immune suppression to fight against bovine leukemia

    The anti-bovine PD-1 rat antibody (left) was found unstable in the cow’s body and had no antiviral effect. So, the research team formed a rat-bovine chimeric antibody (right) which successfully showed an antiviral effect. Bovine leukemia is a systemic, malignant lymphosarcoma in cows which...
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  • Mosquito preference for human vs animal biting has genetic basis

    Mosquito preference for human vs animal biting has genetic basis

      Mosquitoes are more likely to feed on cattle than on humans if they carry a specific chromosomal rearrangement in their genome. This reduces their odds of transmitting the malaria parasite, according to a University of California, Davis, study published Sept. 15 in the journal PLOS Gen...
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  • Lactation, weather found to predict milk quality in dairy cows

    Lactation, weather found to predict milk quality in dairy cows

    The quality of colostrum — the nutrient-rich milk newborn dairy calves first drink from their mothers — can be predicted by the mother’s previous lactation performance and weather, according to new research from the NH Agricultural Experiment Station at the University of New Ha...
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  • Liver Fluke Control in Beef Cattle

    Liver Fluke Control in Beef Cattle

    M.B. Irsik, Charles Courtney III, and Ed Richey The common liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica) is recognized as one of the most damaging parasites in Florida cattle. The liver fluke is a problem in the Gulf Coast states and the Pacific Northwest; in Florida, most infected cattle are found grazing low...
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  • Humans, livestock in Kenya linked in sickness and in health

    Humans, livestock in Kenya linked in sickness and in health

    After tracking 1,500 households and their livestock in 10 western Kenyan villages for one year, researchers found a strong relationship between the number of illnesses among family members and the number of livestock sicknesses and deaths in the same household. This is a farmer enrolled in the s...
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  • How to keep cows happy

    How to keep cows happy

    Brazilian study shows how small changes on farms can lower stress levels of cattle  Corrals are used on livestock farms around the world to round up the animals when they need to be weighed or vaccinated. New research now shows that removing splashes of colors, shadows or water puddles from corr...
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  • How the smallest bacterial pathogens outwit host immune defenses by stealth mechanisms

    How the smallest bacterial pathogens outwit host immune defenses by stealth mechanisms

    Despite their relatively small genome, mycoplasmas can cause persistent and difficult-to-treat infections in humans and animals. A study has shown how mycoplasmas escape the immune response. Mycoplasmas ‘mask’ themselves: They use their small genome in a clever way and compensate for ...
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  • How blood-sucking insects find dark-coated cattle in the dark

    How blood-sucking insects find dark-coated cattle in the dark

    Last year, biologist Susanne Åkesson at Lund University in Sweden, together with researchers in Hungary, received the Ig Nobel Prize in Physics. The prize was awarded to them for their research showing that dark-coated horses suffer more from blood-sucking horseflies compared to their white coun...
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  • Horses get the flu, too

    Horses get the flu, too

    Flu vaccines for horses haven’t been updated in more than 25 years, but researchers have developed a new live equine influenza vaccine that’s safe and more protective than existing vaccines. Proactively preventing the spread of flu in animals is important, as animals are the most lik...
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  • Happy cows make more nutritious milk

    Happy cows make more nutritious milk

    The results of a new study could lead to a better understanding of how to improve the health of dairy cows, and keep the milk flowing. Daily infusions with a chemical commonly associated with feelings of happiness were shown to increase calcium levels in the blood of Holstein cows and the milk o...
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  • Grazing horses on better pastures

    Grazing horses on better pastures

    Horses are grazing annual warm-season forages in St. Paul, Minnesota.   When you picture a horse, you may imagine it grazing contentedly in a grassy pasture. Grazing lets horses move around naturally outdoors and socialize with other horses. And grass is an easily available, nutritious feed...
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  • Getting a better handle on methane emissions from livestock

    Getting a better handle on methane emissions from livestock

    Cattle, swine and poultry contribute a hefty portion to the average American’s diet, but raising all this livestock comes at a cost to the environment: The industry produces a lot of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Just how much gas the animals release, however, is the subject of debate. ...
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  • Gene therapy can cure lameness in horses, research finds

    Gene therapy can cure lameness in horses, research finds

    Injecting DNA into injured horse tendons and ligaments can cure lameness, new research involving scientists at Kazan Federal University, Moscow State Academy and The University of Nottingham has found. The gene therapy technology was used in horses that had gone lame due to injury and within two ...
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  • Environmentally friendly cattle production

    Environmentally friendly cattle production

    Three hundred years ago, enormous herds of bison, antelope and elk roamed North America, and the land was pristine and the water clean.   However, today when cattle congregate, they’re often cast as the poster animals for overgrazing, water pollution and an unsustainable industry. While som...
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  • Efficient technique discovered for isolating embryonic stem cells in cows

    Efficient technique discovered for isolating embryonic stem cells in cows

    Findings could advance cattle production, help study human disease For more than 35 years, scientists have tried to isolate embryonic stem cells in cows without much success. Under the right conditions, embryonic stem cells can grow indefinitely and make any other cell type or tissue, which has ...
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  • Cracking the genetic code for complex traits in cattle

    A massive global study involving 58,000 cattle has pinpointed the genes that influence the complex genetic trait of height in cattle, opening the door for researchers to use the same approach to map high-value traits including those important for beef and milk production. The University of Queens...
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  • Cow gene study shows why most clones fail

    Cow gene study shows why most clones fail

      Dot and Ditto, two healthy cloned calves born at UC Davis in 2003. While Dot and Ditto were healthy and went on to have calves of their own, many cloned embryos fail. A new study shows that many genes are abnormally regulated in cloned embryos, especially in extra embryonic tissue and the...
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  • Cloned sheep can live long and healthy live

    Cloned sheep can live long and healthy live

    Three weeks after the scientific world marked the 20th anniversary of the birth of Dolly the sheep new research, published by The University of Nottingham, in the academic journal Nature Communications has shown that four clones derived from the same cell line — genomic copies of Dolly ...
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  • Cattle Tail Lice

    Cattle Tail Lice

      P. E. Kaufman, P. G. Koehler, and J. F. Butler The cattle tail louse, Haematopinus quadripertusus (Figure 1), is the most important damaging cattle louse in Florida. In other parts of the United States the short-nosed cattle louse is the major pest. While much information is available for...
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  • Cattle Management is the Key to Your Herd’s Health

    Cattle Management is the Key to Your Herd’s Health

    The health of each animal on your farm is important, but livestock health is often discussed in terms of the whole herd. That’s because whether you have two cattle or 200, what distresses one easily can affect the others. Transmissible diseases, environmental conditions, and weather may aff...
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  • Bovine tuberculosis shows genetic diversity throughout Africa

    Bovine tuberculosis shows genetic diversity throughout Africa

    Bovine tuberculosis (BTB) is an infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium bovis that affects cattle as well as other animals and humans. Now, by combining genotyping M. bovis samples from cows across African countries, researchers have been able to study the diversity and evolution of the disea...
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  • Bluetongue

    What is bluetongue? Bluetongue is a disease of ruminant livestock that is caused by the bluetongue virus. Bluetongue virus does not cause disease in humans. This virus is transmitted to livestock by selected species in the genus Culicoides (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae). These small insects are bitin...
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  • Researchers find biological treatment for cow disease

    Researchers find biological treatment for cow disease

    A University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences researcher and his colleagues are far more certain now that a new biological treatment could prevent dairy cattle from getting uterine diseases, which might improve food safety for people. That’s because Kwang Cheol “...
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  • Vaccine developed for devastating pig virus

    Vaccine developed for devastating pig virus

    In less than a year, University of Saskatchewan (U of S) scientists have developed and tested a prototype vaccine that could protect the North American swine industry from a virus that has killed more than eight million pigs and cost more than $400 million in lost income since 2013. The Porcine ...
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