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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.
1

The relationship of prepartum body condition score to postpartum colostrum quality and milk yield and composition in polypay sheep

Al-Sabbagh, Tariq Ashour 21 June 1994 (has links)
Graduation date: 1995
2

Histological evaluation of ovine mammary tissue xenografted into cyclosporine treated mice

Daniel, Thomas Earl 22 June 2010 (has links)
Cyclosporine (CsA), a fungal peptide with remarkable anti-lymphocytic properties, has been shown to be an effective immunosuppressive agent. In three separate experiments, mice receiving CsA at various doses (8 mg/kg/day in the first two experiments and 70-100 mg/kg/day in the third), were implanted with ovine mammary tissue expants at various sites (subcutaneous dorsum, ovarian fat-pad, and cleared mammary gland fat-pad). After different periods of time, (day 3, 7, 14, 21, and 35) implants were removed, fixed, stained, and embedded. Epithelial morphology of the implants was evaluated via a grading system that classified epithelium from 1 (poor) to 5 (excellent). Leukocyte type and number was determined in subepithelial stroma of implants in the third experiment. In the first two experiments, histological evaluation revealed that the transplanted tissue did not survive, regardless of site of implantation or developmental stage of donor tissue. In experiment three higher, dosages of CsA and different donor tissue were used, this resulted in significantly higher (P < .05) mean epithelial scores (indicative of healthier epithelium) for two CsA treated groups vs two control groups (3.75 and 2.33 vs 2.0 and 1.25, respectively). Within each treatment group (CsA and control), one group of mice received exogenous estrogen and progesterone (EjP) implants. CsA treated mice receiving E/P had significantly higher (P < .05) epithelial scores than those not receiving hormones (3.68 vs 2.83). The reverse was true for lymphocyte number (18.9 vs 40.5 cells per 117,600 um² of subepithelial stroma) which were significantly less in CsA + E/P treated mice. The overall correlation between lymphocyte number and epithelial score was -.55 (P < .0001). These results indicate that ovine mammary tissue xenografted into mice treated with high doses of CsA, are capable of surviving for extended periods of time (at least 35 days). / Master of Science
3

Temperament and milk quality in sheep and cattle

Sart, Sarula January 2005 (has links)
[Truncated abstract] It is well known that cows produce more milk if they are comfortable at milking, because stress from milking may cause them milk ejection problems. Temperament is an intrinsic characteristic of the animals so may affect the level of comfort at milking, and stress from the milking process itself may have a greater impact on animals with nervous temperament than on those of nervous temperament. When the milking becomes a stressor, it may affect secretion of milk ejection hormones that, in turn, may affect milk yield and composition. There is little evidence for how animal temperament affects milk quality in different farm animals. In this thesis, I have examined the effects of temperament on quantity and quality of the milk from Merino ewes and Holstein cows. I also tested whether temperament affected the processing performance (clotting properties) of the milk from Merino ewes. The general hypotheses tested were: 1. Calm ewes would produce more milk of better quality than nervous ewes, and, consequently, the clotting properties would be better in the milk from calm ewes than from nervous ewes. 2. Calm cows would produce more milk of better quality than nervous cows.

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