606 research outputs found

    ADOPTION OF BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN STOCKER CATTLE PRODUCTION

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    This study identifies current production and management practices of Oklahoma stocker cattle producers and analyzes factors affecting the adoption of best management practices (BMPs) using chi-square analysis. Results reveal that factors influencing the adoption of BMPs are operation size, dependency upon income from the operation, and specialization in stocker production.cattle, stockers, management, production, Livestock Production/Industries,

    Nexos iconográficos entre las columnas de Tula y los discos de oro de Chichén Itzá. 26. Arqueología

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    •Acosta,J. 1945. "La cuarta y quinta temporadas de exploraciones arqueológicas en Tula, Hidalgo, 1943-44", en revista mexicana de estudios antropológicos, núm. 7, pp. 23-64.•Adams, R.E.W. 1977. Prehistoric Mesoamerica Boston, Little, Brown and Co.•Andrews .IV y E.Wyllys 1977. "Archaeology and Prehistory in the Northern Maya Lowlands: An lntroduction ", en Handbook of Middle American indians, vol. 2, pp. 288-330.•Cabrera Castro, R.; S. Sugiyama y G. Cowgill 1991. "The Templo de Quetzalcoatl Project at Teotihuacan", en Ancient Mesoomerica, núm. 2, pp. 77-92.•Cohodas, M. 1978. The greal ball court al Chichen ltza, Yucatan, Mexico, New York, Garland Publishing.•Cowgill, G. 1977. "Processes of Growth, Ili and Decline at Teotihuacán: The City and the State", en los procesos de cambio en Mesoamérica y áreas circunvecinas, XI Mesa redonda, vol. 1, México, Sociedad Mexicana de Antropología, pp. 183-193.•De la Fuente, B.; S.Treja y N.Gutiérrez Solana 1988.Ecultura en piedra de Tula,. México, lnstituto de Investigaciones Estéticas-Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.•Diehl, R. 1983. Tula:the Toltec capital of ancient, Mexico, EUA, Thames and Hudson , lnc.•Durán, O. 1964. The Aztecs, New York , Orion Press.•Edwards, O.y T.Stocker 2001. "Covariance of Poscclassic figurine styles, settllement patterns and political boundaries in the Basin of Mexico", en Tire New World figurine project, vol. 2, Stocker y C. Charlton (eds.), pp. 55-87.•Feldman. L. 1974. "Tollan in Hidalgo: native accounts of the Central Mexican Tolteca ", en Studies in ancient Tollan, R . Diehl (ed.), University of Missouri Monographs in Anthropology, núm. 1, pp. 130-149.•Gillespie, S. 1989. The Aztec kings, Tucson, Universi­ty of Arizona .•Kaplan, J. 2000. "A great emblematic depiction of throned rule and royal sacrifice at Late PreClassic Kaminaljuyu" , en Ancient Mesoamerica, núm . 11, pp. 185-198.•Kelekna , P. 1998. "'War and Theocracy", en Chief­doms and chieftaincy in the Americas, E. Redmond (ed.), Gainesville, Universiry of Florida Press, pp. 164-188.•Kelley, E. 1978. "The Temple of the Skulls at Alcavisca, Cha lchihuites", en Across the Chichimec sea, C. Riley y B. Hedrick (eds.), Carbondale, Souchern Illinois University Press, pp. 102-126.•Kristan-Graham .C. 1989. Art, rulership and tire Mesoamerican body p olitic al Tula and Chichen Itza, UCLA, dissercation.•Kubler, G. 1984. The art and orclritecture of ancient America: the Mexican, Maya and Andean peoples , New York, Penguin Books.•Luján, L.; R.Cobean y A.G. Mastache 1995. Xochicalco y Tula, México, Jaca Book. •Mandeville, M. 1974. "Chipped Stone points from Tula'', en Studies in oncimt To/Ion, R. Diehl (ed.), Univers iry of Missiuri Monographs in Anchropology , pp. 95-104.•Mílbrath S. 1999. Star gods of the Mayo astronomy in art,folklore and calendars, Austin, Universicy of Texas Press.•Miller M. 1999. Maya art and architecture, New York, Thames and Hudson.•Proskouriakoff, T. 1974. Jades from the Cenote of Sa­ crifice, Chichen ltza, Yucacan, en Memoirs o/ the Peabody Museum of Ar­ chaeology and Ethnology, vol. 1O, núm. 1, Cambridge, Harvard University.•Ringle, W., T. Negrón y G.Bey 111 1998. "The return of Queczalcoacl", en Ancient Mesoamerica, núm. 9, pp. 183-232.•Schele, L 1998. "The iconography of Maya ar­chitectural facades during the Late classic period'', en Function and meaning in Classic Maya architecture, S. Houscon (ed.), Washington, D.C., Dumbarton Oaks, pp. 479-518.•Schmookler .A. 1984. Parable o/ the tribes: theproblem of social evolution, Boscon, Houghron Mifflin.•Stocker, T. 1974. "A small temple in che Tula residential zone", en Studies in ancient Tollan, R. Diehl (ed.), Uni­ versity of Missouri Monographs in An chropology, núm . 1, pp. 25-31.1983. Figurines from Tula, Hidalgo, Mexi­ co, tesis, Universicy of Illinois, Urbana. 1987. "Conquesc, tribute and che rise of the state", en Studies in the neolithic and urban revolutions, L. Manzanilla (ed.), BAR Internacional Series 349, pp. 365-376.1991. "lntroduccion", en The New Worldfigurine project,vol. 1, Stocker (ed.),_Provo, Research Press, pp. 1-2.1993a. "Contradicrlons in religious myts: Tezcatlipoca and his exis­tence at Tula, Hidalgo, Mexico", en Notas Mesoamericanas, 14, pp. 63-92.1993b. Who were che Toltecs and what did they do?, ponencia presen­ tada en la XIII reunión de IAES, México.2000a . "Ethnohistorical input for the Mesoamerican obsidian indus try", en Nahua Newsletter, núm . 30, pp. 27-31.2000b. "Reconsidering commems on Sahagún's 260 day signs", Nahua Newsletter, núm. 30, pp. 25-26.2001a. "Further coments on Towns­end's the Azcecs, en Nahua Newsletter, en prensa.2001b. A walk through an Aztec dream , Taejon, South Korea, Heliot House.2002 "The Aztec Trickster on Display", en www.tr ickster.org s.f. The Aztec augury table, manus­crito original.•Stocker, T.y D.James 1988. "Semiotic analysis of Prehis­toric texts, en Semiotics, J.Deely (ed.), N.Y., Un iversity Press of Amer ica, 1987, pp. 183-192. •Slocker, T. y E.Kylar 1984. "Aztec warfare. Sacrifice and cannibalism", en The Explorers Journal, mím 62, pp. 126-133.•Stocker, T., S. Meltzoff y S.Armsev 1979. "Further incerpretations in Formative period iconography", en American antiquity , núm. 45, pp. 740-58.•Stocker T.y M.Spence 1974. "Obsidian eccencrics from Central Mexico'', en Studies in ancient Tollan, R. Diehl (ed.), University of Missouri Monographs in Anthropology, núm. l, pp. 88-94.•Tezozomoc , Hernando Alvarado 1975. Crónica mexicayotl , México, UNAM.•Tozzer ,A. 1957. "Chichén Itzá and its Cenote of Sacrifice: A comparative scudy of contemporaneous Maya and Toltec", en Memoirs of the Peobody Museum of Archaeologyond Ethnology, vols. 11-12.•Umberger, E. 1987. Antiques, revivals, and references to the pase in the Aztec are, en Res, núm. 13, pp. 61-105.•Van de Guchte, M. 1999. "The Inca cognition of landscape", en Archaeologies of landscape: Contemporary perspectives, T. Ashmore y B. Knapp (eds.), Oxford, Blackwell

    Cambarus loughmani, a new species of crayfish (Decapoda: Cambaridae) endemic to the pre-glacial Teays River Valley in West Virginia, USA

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    Foltz, David A., Sadecky, Nicole M., Myers, Greg A., Fetzner, James W., Welsh, Stuart A., Stocker, G. Whitney, Glon, Mael G., Thoma, Roger F. (2019): Cambarus loughmani, a new species of crayfish (Decapoda: Cambaridae) endemic to the pre-glacial Teays River Valley in West Virginia, USA. Journal of Natural History 52 (45-46): 2875-2897, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2018.1557271, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2018.155727

    Estimation of Genetic Parameters for Post-Weaning Performance Traits in Brahman and Brahman-Influenced Stocker Cattle on Forage-Based Studies

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    The objectives of this study were to estimate heritability of performance traits in Brahman and Brahman-influenced (�� or �� Brahman) stocker cattle on cool-season (n = 1,732) and warm-season (n = 1,199) forages. Cattle were born from 1986 to 2011 at the Texas A&M AgriLife Research and Extension Center at Overton, TX. Traits included end of period body weight (BW), average daily gain (ADG), and body condition score (BCS). Data were analyzed for each season using animal models, with main effects including stocking rate (3 levels), breed type (3 levels), supplementation (2 levels), and contemporary groups constructed by sex and year. Age was fit as a linear covariate. Across levels of stocking rate, calves at low stocking rates had heavier BW, higher ADG, and higher BCS than calves at medium and high stocking rates. For cool-season ADG and BCS, an interaction between breed type and supplementation was included (P = 0.002). Supplemented calves had higher BCS across all breed types, while only �� Brahman ADG was greater for supplemented cattle. All warm-season traits differed between levels of supplementation. For warm-season, �� Brahman had the heaviest BW, while �� and purebred Brahman did not differ (P = 0.39). For ADG, �� Brahman was greater than �� Brahmans and purebreds, which did not differ (P = 0.10). No difference in warm-season BCS between breed types was detected. Heritability estimates for cool-season BW, ADG, and BCS were 0.72 �� 0.094, 0.14 �� 0.083, and 0.25 �� 0.099, respectively. For warm-season forages, heritability estimates for BW, ADG, and BCS were 0.44 �� 0.130, 0.15 �� 0.099, and 0.29 �� 0.106, respectively. The estimates for ADG and BCS in both seasons corresponded with estimates of similar traits in other experiments, as did the estimate for warm-season BW. The estimate for cool-season BW seemed high. Potential causes included influence of breed type on heritability estimates, as documented in other studies, as well as differences between traits in seasons, where measurements of the same trait in different environments could differ

    The construction of Karen Karnak: The multi-author-function

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    This thesis is situated within the comparatively recent developments of Web 2.0 and the emergence of interactive WikiMedia, and explores the mode of authorship within a Read/Write culture compared to that of a Read/Only tradition. The hypothesis of this study is that the role of the audience has become merged with the author, and as such, represents new functions and attributes, distinct from a more conventional concept of authorship, in which the roles of audience and author are more separate. Read/Write and participatory culture, as defined by this study, is focused on collaboration, and includes the influences of D.I.Y. culture, Open-Source practices and the production of text by multiple authors. Multi-authorship presents a re-thinking of several concepts which support the notion of the individual author, since the focus of multi-authorship is not on attribution and ownership of a finished text, but on the continued malleability of a text. Modes of multi-authorship, demonstrated in the use of the pseudonyms Alan Smithee and Karen Eliot, represent declarative authors whose names signify multiple origins, whilst concurrently indicating a distinct body of work. The function of these names form an important context to this study, since primary research involves the construction of an experimental mode of multi-authorship utilising WikiMedia technology and the interaction of thirty nine participants, who are invited to create a body of work under the collective pseudonym Karen Karnak. The data generated by this experiment is analysed using aspects of Michel Foucault's author-function to identify and determine power structures inherent in the WikiMedia context. The interplay of power structures, including concepts such as identity, ownership and the body of work, affect the resulting mode of authorship and contribute to the construction of Karen Karnak, suggesting further areas of research into the emerging multi-author

    Analyzing Animal Disease, Stocker Cattle Production Systems, and Policy Choices in Production Agriculture

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    Agricultural producers across a diverse set of enterprises face significant risk each year when planting begins, livestock are purchased, or a new investment is made in machinery or facilities. Participants in other industries face risk from financial markets, global trends, and the preferences of customers. Unique to agriculture is risk from biologically-induced time-lags in production, climate variability, invasive species and pests, and disease in addition to the risks faced by other industries. Where some industries are able to spread risk over dozens, hundreds, even thousands of shareholders, the risk from working in production agricultural commonly accrues to a single nuclear family, or a small number of relatives. Farm managers face different decisions daily, and a single choice can significantly impact profitability. The collection of research in the following essay models under widely different circumstances in which management must choose between options that represent significantly different levels of profitability. The first essay included in this research estimates the cost of a Cattle Fever Tick eradication procedure in South Texas to an individual ranch and government agencies. The second essay estimates average daily gain in stocker enterprises based on different levels of days on pasture, stocking rate, and supplementation, and determines whether days on pasture are significantly impacted by changing temperature and precipitation. The third essay determines the value of a theoretical mix of the agricultural revenue coverage (ARC) and price loss coverage (PLC) programs

    Figure 1. Sheared principal component analysis plot depicting morphometric variation among Cambarus aff. dubius, C. pauleyi, C in Cambarus loughmani, a new species of crayfish (Decapoda: Cambaridae) endemic to the pre-glacial Teays River Valley in West Virginia, USA

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    Figure 1. Sheared principal component analysis plot depicting morphometric variation among Cambarus aff. dubius, C. pauleyi, C. loughmani, and nominate C. dubius.Published as part of Foltz, David A., Sadecky, Nicole M., Myers, Greg A., Fetzner, James W., Welsh, Stuart A., Stocker, G. Whitney, Glon, Mael G. & Thoma, Roger F., 2019, Cambarus loughmani, a new species of crayfish (Decapoda: Cambaridae) endemic to the pre-glacial Teays River Valley in West Virginia, USA, pp. 2875-2897 in Journal of Natural History 52 (45-46) on page 2881, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2018.1557271, http://zenodo.org/record/517810

    Contract Grazing on Winter Annuals: Risks and Returns for Cattle Owners

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    Critical factors affecting risk and profitability for cattle owners under contract grazing include cattle weight at purchase and time spent on pasture and feedlot. Buying lighter animals and placing them in pastures before sending them to feedlot is the most profitable as well as least risky option. Even in the least risky scenario, the cattle owner would still incur losses 28% of the times. The results also show a possibility that at contract-grazing rates of $0.41 per pound of gain or more, the cattle owner would place cattle directly on the feedlot, bypassing the pasture.contract grazing, risks, returns, Farm Management, Livestock Production/Industries, Q12,

    Figure 3 in Cambarus loughmani, a new species of crayfish (Decapoda: Cambaridae) endemic to the pre-glacial Teays River Valley in West Virginia, USA

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    Figure 3. Dorsal view of a female specimen of Cambarus loughmani collected from the type locality, burrows adjacent to Little Island Creek, Lincoln County, West Virginia, displaying typical life colours for the species. Photo by Dr Guenter Schuster.Published as part of Foltz, David A., Sadecky, Nicole M., Myers, Greg A., Fetzner, James W., Welsh, Stuart A., Stocker, G. Whitney, Glon, Mael G. & Thoma, Roger F., 2019, Cambarus loughmani, a new species of crayfish (Decapoda: Cambaridae) endemic to the pre-glacial Teays River Valley in West Virginia, USA, pp. 2875-2897 in Journal of Natural History 52 (45-46) on page 2883, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2018.1557271, http://zenodo.org/record/517810

    Reconsideración del elemento trilobulado en Mesoamérica: examen de los datos, interpretaciones sobre su continuidad y sugerencias para investigaciones futuras. 30. Arqueología

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