Pigs Cultural
Mostrando 1-12 de 12 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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1. The Livestock Roles in the Wellbeing of Rural Communities of Timor-Leste
The livestock species play very important economic and socio-cultural roles for the wellbeing of rural households, such as food supply, source of income, asset saving, source of employment, soil fertility, livelihoods, transport, agricultural traction, agricultural diversification and sustainable agricultural production. The aim of this work was to identify
Rev. Econ. Sociol. Rural. Publicado em: 2015-03
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2. Projeto Porto Novo: Fé, altruísmo e contradições dos alemães do oeste de Santa Catarina.
The purpose of this research was to analyze the web of cultural, economical, and social relationships that were woven into life of the Germans of the New Port project (which is now the County districts of Itapiranga, Saint John of the West, and Tunápolis) foundeb by Jesuit Priests in 1926 in the extreme West of Santa catarina. The study, full of subjective
Publicado em: 2006
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3. Estudo do conforto termico, desempenho animal e racionalização de energia eletrica em uma instalação suinocola na região de Boituva-SP / Study of thermal comfort, animal perfomance and energy savings in a swine barn in Boituva - SP, Brazil
A great challenge in the swine production is the definition of a construction model capable of bringing a better thermal comfort to the animals. The greatest losses on production occur due very hot days and great thermal variation, which are the chief characteristics of the tropical weather. An alternative to minimize these losses is the use of diverse clima
Publicado em: 2005
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4. Evaluation of a modified complement fixation test and an indirect hemagglutination test for the serodiagnosis of melioidosis in pigs.
A complement fixation test modified by the addition of porcine serum and an indirect hemagglutination test were used to detect antibodies to Pseudomonas pseudomallei in pigs. These tests together with cultural examinations were carried out with 250 pigs. The sensitivity and specificity values were 79.3 and 99.5% and 82.8 and 93.2% for the modified complement
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5. Primary acute histoplasmosis in guinea pigs exposed to aerosolized Histoplasma capsulatum.
Guinea pigs were examined as a possible in vivo model for human histoplasmosis. Guinea pigs were exposed to an aerosol of viable microconidia and mycelial fragments of Histoplasma capsulatum generated in a Henderson apparatus. Colonization and infection of the lungs occurred, with subsequent involvement of the regional lymph nodes and reticuloendothelial org
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6. INFLUENCE OF GUINEA PIG PLASMA FACTORS ON PHAGOCYTOSIS OF PASTEURELLA PESTIS: II. Plasma from Plague-Infected Guinea Pigs
Stanziale, W. G. (Fort Detrick, Frederick, Md.) and J. D. White. Influence of guinea pig plasma factors on phagocytosis of Pasteurella pestis. II. Plasma from plague-infected guinea pigs. J. Bacteriol. 83:182–186. 1962.—The phagocytosis enhancing property of normal guinea pig plasma was altered during experimental plague infection. The most notable chang
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7. Isolation of Legionella pneumophila from nonepidemic-related aquatic habitats.
Continuous centrifugation of large volumes of water from natural southeastern lakes allowed quantitative detection of Legionella pneumophila by direct immunofluorescent staining. Positive samples were injected intraperitoneally into guinea pigs, and the L. pneumophila were isolated and identified by their morphological, cultural, physiological, and serologic
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8. Virus isolation studies in an outbreak of porcine encephalomyelitis.
An outbreak of central nervous system disease affecting young pigs occurred in the fall of 1981 in eastern Ontario. A diagnosis of viral encephalomyelitis was made on pathological grounds and virus isolation studies were subsequently initiated to determine the causative agent. Cultural isolation procedures using several biological systems failed to detect vi
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9. Cultural and physiological characteristics of Clostridium botulinum type G and the susceptibility of certain animals to its toxin.
Strain 89 of Clostridium botulinum type G, isolated by Gimenez and Ciccarelli in 1969, was characterized culturally, biochemically, and toxigenically. It was motile, hemolytic asaccharolytic, weakly proteolytic, lipase and lecithinase negative, and it produced acetic, isobutyric, butyric, and isovaleric acids in peptone-yeast extract-glucose broth. No spores
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10. Swine refusal factors elaborated by Fusarium strains and identified as trichothecenes.
Fusarium poae (Peck) Wollenw. NRRL 3287, F. nivale (Fr.) Ces. NRRL 3289, and F. moniliforme Sheldon NRRL 3197, each grown on cracked corn (13 days at 28 degrees C), produced refusal factors in pig bioassays. Substantial quantities of trichothecenes were detected in the refused corn: T-2 toxin (30 micrograms/g) was detected in corn fermented with the F. poae
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11. Types and Distribution of Anaerobic Bacteria in the Large Intestine of Pigs
An examination was made of various sites along the length of the swine large intestine, using strictly anaerobic culture methods. Sites were separated by differential washing into fractions described as lumenal content, lumenal surface layer, and intestinal wall tissue. Direct microscopic clump counts averaged 13.3 × 1010 organisms per g (dry weight) of mat
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12. Leptospiral Selection, Growth, and Virulence in Synthetic Medium1
Stalheim, O. H. V. (National Animal Disease Laboratory, Ames, Iowa). Leptospiral selection, growth, and virulence in synthetic medium. J. Bacteriol. 92:946–951. 1966.—The need for protein in leptospiral cultural medium may be circumvented by the use of strains which tolerate the lytic activity of polyoxyethylene sorbitan monooleate (Tween 80), a relative