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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
81

Characterisation of duck lymphoid all populations and their role in immunity to duck hepatitis B virus / Edward M. Bertram.

Bertram, Edward M. January 1997 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 184-218. / xx, 218, [135] leaves, [15] leaves of plates : ill. (chiefly col.) ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / The research in this thesis describes the development and use of assays to detect cellular immune responses in ducks with application to duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV) infections. This animal model is used to provide an additional area of research which complements the study of hepadnaviruses. The introduction contains an outline of the significance of hepadnavirus research, including hepatitis B virus (HBV) epidemiology, structure, replication and clinical manifestations of the diseases caused by the virus. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Microbiology and Immunology, 1997
82

Genetic improvement of skeletal architecture and locomotion in domestic poultry

Duggan, Brendan Michael January 2018 (has links)
Breeding success in the broiler chicken has been accompanied by gait problems which are detrimental to productivity and welfare. Although these gait issues have not been reported to the same extent in Pekin ducks, there is concern that such problems will manifest if the duck continues on its current selection trajectory. In order to understand how changes in morphology due to selection have affected gait in both species, divergent lines were objectively assessed for gait using a pressure platform (12 birds per line at three, five and seven weeks of age). The broiler chicken was compared to the slower growing layer chicken and the Pekin duck to its slower growing ancestor, the mallard. Two breeding lines of Pekin duck were also assessed. After gait assessment, the leg bones (femur and tibiotarsus) were scanned by computed tomography to measure morphological changes which have occurred due to selection for high growth and meat yield. Results were analysed by ANOVA, accounting for age and sex. During walking, heavy lines walked at a slower velocity, displayed a wider stance and spent more time supporting their mass on both feet than their lighter conspecifics, strategies which are likely to improve balance. The foot angle while walking differed between lines; all duck lines rotated their feet internally whereas the layer chickens’ feet were aligned with the direction of travel. Conversely the broiler chicken rotated its feet externally by seven weeks of age. Morphologically, the main differences were between species. Duck lines reached adult leg size earlier than chickens, which may be a response to differing adaptive environments prior to domestication. This early cessation of bone growth in ducks may provide more opportunity for the bones to remodel to handle the loads imposed on them. Lower levels of porosity and a unique cortical architecture observed in ducks endow relatively greater bone strength. Bone curvature also differed between species; the tibiotarsus curved more laterally in ducks than in chickens and may be a swimming adaptation that hinders locomotion on land in the modern production bird. In order to improve the objectivity of selection for better gait in poultry, the genetic parameters of gait components selected on the basis of results in this thesis were estimated using a linear mixed model in a population of Pekin ducks of known pedigree. As they are a simpler measure, similar or improved heritability estimates were estimated for these gait components when compared with the standard commercial gait score which is based on a subjective view of walking ability. Intense selection for economic traits has altered gait in similar ways in both species. To improve gait in poultry, greater breeding success may be achieved by focussing on those components of gait which have changed through selection, rather than using a subjective overall visual gait score. Furthermore, in both species, adaptations for pre-domesticated life may have affected the ability with which the selected lines have accommodated their gait to other morphological changes associated with increasing body mass.
83

The adrenal gland and the diving response in ducks (Anas platyrhynchos)

Mangalam, Harry Joseph January 1984 (has links)
The extreme elevation in plasma levels of norepinephrine (NE) and epinephrine (EP) which occurs during forced diving of ducks (Anas platyrhynchos) was studied before and after denervation of the adrenal glands. Elevated PaCO₂, decreased arterial pH, decreased blood glucose as well as low PaO₂ have been described as causal factors in this response. These variables, as well as blood pressure, heart rate and breathing frequency were measured in ducks dived after breathing air or pure 0₂ to clarify and quantify the mechanism involved and its physiological function. Both NE and EP concentration increased by up to 2 orders of magnitude in the 4 minute dive period, but by a significantly lesser amount if the duck breathed 0₂, before the dive. While pH and PaCO₂ were well correlated with the changes in plasma NE and EP levels during both air and 0₂ dives, both pH and PaCO₂ changed more in the 0₂ trials, indicating that they are not the primary cause of the response. Plasma glucose levels were variable. PaO₂ values less than normal correlated well with increasing NE and EP concentrations, but at high PaO₂s, there was no correlation, suggesting that hypoxia is the permissive state for the full response. Compared with breathing air, breathing O₂ before the dive attenuated the diving bradycardia, eliminated the decrease in blood pressure normally observed during dives, and caused more extreme changes in pH, PaC0₂, and of course, PaO₂. Denervating the adrenals decreased the amounts of both catecholamines released during dives after breathing air and 0₂, EP significantly more than NE. Adrenal denervation per se did not cause a significant change in heart rate, blood pressure, arterial gas tensions, pH, or plasma glucose changes during dives although the operation caused increased variation in some of the parameters. In ducks, the cause for the catecholamine release is decreasing PaO₂ and full expression of the response is dependent on intact innervation of the adrenal gland, although there is a component that is unaffected by denervation. While possible roles for this response are discussed, the true physiological function of this response remains cast in shadows. / Science, Faculty of / Zoology, Department of / Graduate
84

Neural control of the cardiac response of the Pekin duck (Anas platyrhynchos) to forced submersion

Gabbott, Geoffrey Roy Julian January 1985 (has links)
Cardiovascular responses evoked during forced submersion enable the Pekin duck (Anas platyrhynchos) to survive protracted periods of asphyxia. The responses include an extraordinary bradycardia and intense peripheral vasoconstriction with the result that blood flow is favoured to those organs most susceptible to lack of oxygen. These adjustments appear to be mediated via the caudal brainstem following stimulation of peripheral and central arterial chemoreceptors. The minor role that baroreceptors play in the generation of these responses was demonstrated by the persistence of the cardiovascular changes following peripheral arterial baroreceptor denervation. Isolation of the cephalic circulation from the systemic circulation enabled a series of experiments to assess the relative contributions from peripheral chemoreceptors, located in the carotid bodies, and from unidentified central chemoreceptors within the cranial circulation. A declining arterial P0₂ in the systemic circulation appeared especially potent in evoking bradycardia during submersion. Increased arterial PC0₂, likewise, resulted in a reduced heart rate. Similar changes in the blood gas levels of the cephalic circulation did not elicit significant bradycardia. However, both receptor groups responded to arterial hypoxic hypercapnia by activating substantial reduction in peripheral blood flow, as reflected by the rise in hind limb vascular resistance. Although baroreceptors may continue to mitigate changes in arterial blood pressure and cause some change in heart rate and vascular resistance, chemoreceptors appear to be predominantly responsible for the changes during submersion. The cardiac response to chemoreceptor stimulation during submersion was discovered to habituate following repetitive diving. Habituation was so pronounced in some ducks that after several training sessions the bradycardia during 40-second forced dives was abolished. Habituation of the cardiac response appeared dependent on the intensity of chemoreceptor stimulation. With severe arterial hypoxia, produced by either prolonging dive times or by reducing the pre-dive inspired oxygen content, little or no cardiac habituation was observed. Tests were conducted to demonstrate efficacy of the cardioinhibitory efferent discharge. Maintained sensitivity of chemoreceptors was suggested by the lack of change in oxygen breathing tests before and after training. Furthermore, the persistence of stimulus intensity was established and these observations led to the suggestion that the locus of habituation is within the CNS. The demonstration that the level of bradycardia was dependent on arterial P0₂ in both naive and habituated animals argues against the contention that the diving response is a fear response. Further evidence against this view was provided by the demonstration that the diving response remains essentially intact following transection in the rostral mesencephalon below the level of the hypothalamus. It is concluded that chemoreceptor-driven cardiovascular changes evoked as part of the diving response are mediated by regions of the CNS below the rostral brainstem. Modification of these responses can be produced in the intact animal by simple forms of learning. However, it remains uncertain at what level this influence arises. / Science, Faculty of / Zoology, Department of / Graduate
85

True metabolizable energy of seeds consumed by postbreeding ducks in Lake Erie marshes /

Hoffman, Robert Dale January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
86

Activity and aggression in captive blue-winged teal (Anas discors)

Stoddart, Ruth (Ruth Ellen) January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
87

Movements and bioenergetics of canvasbacks wintering in the upper Chesapeake Bay

Howerter, David W. 07 April 2009 (has links)
The movement patterns, range areas and energetics of canvasbacks (Aythya valisineria) wintering in the upper Chesapeake Bay, Maryland, were investigated. Eighty-seven juvenile female canvasbacks were radio-tracked between 30 December 1988 and 25 March 1989. Diurnal time and energy budgets were constructed for a time of day-season matrix for canvasbacks using riverine and main bay habitats. Canvasbacks were very active at night, making regular and often lengthy crepuscular movements (x = 11.7 km) from near shore habitats during the day to off shore habitats at night. Movement patterns were similar for birds using habitats on the eastern and western shores of the Bay. Canvasbacks had extensive home ranges averaging 14,286 ha, and used an average of 1.97 core areas. Sleeping was the predominant diurnal behavior. Telemetry indicated that canvasbacks actively fed at night. Canvasbacks spent more time in active behaviors (e.g. swimming, alert) on the eastern shore than on the the western shore. Similarly, canvasbacks were more active during daytime hours at locations where artificial feeding occurred. Behavioral patterns were only weakly correlated with weather patterns. Canvasbacks appeared to reduce energy expenditure in mid-winter by reducing distances moved, reducing feeding activities and increasing the amount of time spent sleeping. This pattern was observed even though 1988-89 mid-winter weather conditions were very mild. / Master of Science
88

Recycling of agro-industrial food wastes into feed for Pekin duck meat production towards a sustainable agriculture in the province of Quebec

Normand, Luc. January 1997 (has links)
Two experiments were carried out to assess the nutritional potential of food wastes to be transformed into duck meat. In both experiments, 600 day-old unsexed White Pekin ducklings were randomly distributed into 6 different dietary treatment groups. / In both experiments, the ducks receiving food wastes had significantly ($ rm P<0.05$) more total body fat than did the control. This was most likely due to the quantity of dietary fat ingested by the ducks. The results reported in this thesis indicate that it is possible to raise Pekin ducks to market weight using food wastes as the only source of feed. To meet the consumer demand of leaner carcasses, the food wastes with a high fat content should be included in a limited amount in the ration. The recycling of industrial food wastes into animal products could be considered an important step toward a sustainable agriculture system in Quebec. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
89

Recycling of agro-industrial food wastes into feed for Pekin duck meat production towards a sustainable agriculture in the province of Quebec

Normand, Luc. January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
90

Economic feasibility of processing food waste and incorporating processed food waste products in least cost duck feeds

Budu, Ben Asare. January 2001 (has links)
The focus of this thesis was to analyze the least cost of producing rations for ducks in three age categories from a mixture of conventional feed ingredients and three different processed food waste products and to examine the financial and economic feasibility of establishing an industrial plant to produce these food waste products in the Montreal region. The first part of the thesis was investigated through the use of a linear programming model. The effect of recognizing the variability of protein levels in the various feed ingredients was examined through the use of chance-constrained programming. / The second part of the thesis was examined using economic and financial analyses for the investment. The basic plant requirements to produce the three processed food waste products were the same, however energy costs were different for the three products. Revenue was generated from tipping fees and the sale of the three processed food waste products. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)

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