Livestock--Acclimatization
Found in 18 Collections and/or Records:
Acclimatisation of Scottish Blackface sheep to cold. 1. Rectal temperature responses, August 1967
Located in A.B.R.O. Reprints 1967 - 1968. Volume 5 of 19.
Acclimatization of Scottish Blackface sheep to cold. 2. Skin temperature, heart rate, respiration rate, shivering intensity and skinfold thickness, February 1968
Located in A.B.R.O. Reprints 1967 - 1968. Volume 5 of 19.
Cold exposure of Southdown and Welsh mountain sheep. 1. Effects of breed, plane of nutrition and acclimization to cold upon resistance to body cooling, February 1969
Located in A.B.R.O. Reprints 1969 - 1970. Volume 6 of 19.
Cold exposure of Southdown and Welsh Mountain sheep. 2. Effects of breed, plane of nutrition and previous aacclimatisation to cold upon skin temperature, heart rate, shivering and respiration rate, February 1969
Located in A.B.R.O. Reprints 1969 - 1970. Volume 6 of 19.
Cold-induced inhibition of thermal panting in shorn sheep. 2. Effect of previous acclimatization to cold, 1973
Located in A.B.R.O. Reprints 1973 - 1974. Volume 8 of 19.
Habituation and acclimization of sheep to cold following exposures of varying length and severity, 1972
Located in A.B.R.O. Reprints 1971 - 1972. Volume 7 of 19.
Habituation to cold in four breeds of sheep, 1983
Located in A.B.R.O. Reprints 1983. Volume 17 of 19.
Lactation in transgenic mice expressing the ovine beta-lactoglobulin gene, 1991
Located in I.A.P.G.R-E.R.S. Staff Papers 1991. Part 2.
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from E. Helen George Smith, 05 May 1904
Smith encloses some photographs of 'Black Agnes' and 'Brenda' with a letter from a Major Fallow (enclosures not present) reporting on their progress. She supposes it takes around eighteen months to acclimatise a horse or mule to the Indian climate.
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from F.M Perry, 02 August 1909
Perry asks Ewart which species of zebra he considers to be the largest and most attractive, how Ewart's specimens have adapted to the Scottish climate and whether their temperament precludes complete domestication.