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Redesigning Animal Agriculture The
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Redesigning Animal Agriculture The
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Contents Contributors vii Acknowled
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Contributors Margaret Alston, Direc
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Acknowledgements “The editors gra
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Introduction to Redesigning Animal
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Introduction xiii factors). In rede
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1 Redesigning Animal Agriculture: a
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ing to the confusions and complexit
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such as environmental integrity alo
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The Systems Idea in Agriculture Sys
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These are all matters that are enti
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was intended to capture this vital
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wants and needs to be comprehensive
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people who can journey together tow
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A Systemic Perspective 17 Gunderson
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and telecommunications infrastructu
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y a move from a more intensive indu
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from 10 to 40% higher than urban Au
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in rural areas - environmental degr
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young people are leaving farms and
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Maintaining Vibrant Rural Communiti
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views in philosophical animal ethic
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case of virtues) there are specific
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animal ethics that is dominated by
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involves a detailed analysis of the
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to the idea that it is not wrong af
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not show sufficient respect to anim
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that ethical norms and ethical voca
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Ethics of Livestock Science 45 Diam
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plasticity of the genome and the po
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a highly predictable and beneficial
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immune response genes in both speci
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annotate these regions. The Herefor
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to their production source. This ca
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cially viable genetic tests. One re
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additive effects of the contributin
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understanding the relationship betw
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The Impact of Genomics 63 Mattick,
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5 Precision Animal Breeding Kishore
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effects (e.g. contemporary groups,
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the mean performance of the parenta
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or even shipped out overseas as liv
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tions underlying the desirable phen
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3. Markers 0.25 cM apart - through
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Infinitesimal Model y = Xb + Z1u +
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Precision Animal Breeding 79 Jansen
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6 Germ Cell Transplantation - a Nov
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testicular environment could be ove
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Brinster et al., 2003). Treatment o
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ingly sought after to produce bioph
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Acknowledgements Work from the auth
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- Page 116 and 117: lentivectors and RNA interference (
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- Page 124 and 125: Regulatory Issues The regulatory re
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- Page 130 and 131: Cloning and Transgenesis 115 Gama,
- Page 132 and 133: Cloning and Transgenesis 117 McCrea
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- Page 136 and 137: 8 Transforming Livestock with Trans
- Page 138 and 139: have been adapted to allow more pre
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- Page 142 and 143: protection of the genome against mo
- Page 144 and 145: (Hammond et al., 2000). Binding of
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- Page 150 and 151: known influenza A virus H subtypes
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- Page 160 and 161: Introduction A key difficulty faced
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- Page 198 and 199: Reef Safe Beef 183 Ludwig, J.A., Wi
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Quarterly flow weighted mean nitrat
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suggest that the majority of inland
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Table 11.3. Current problems in dif
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of diffuse nutrient loading on wate
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● Introducing full nutrient budge
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following scenario 1, and scenario
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Ecological Restoration Targets 203
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This chapter draws on two examples
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(Firbank, 2005; Potter and Tilzey,
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growth in the export market has com
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the use of larger amounts of agroch
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need to establish partnerships with
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Social, Environmental and Economic
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adaptation to environment genetic b
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sequencing of 10, 000 non-redundant
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transfer of nutrients and micro-org
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genotypic value, and EBV 67-68 germ
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livestock transgenics for agricultu
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quantitative genetics use 66-69 sys
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speciesism 35 sperm-mediated gene t
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water quality EU Water Framework Di