Risk of livestock losses to poisonous plants can be reduced on many ranges through prudent management based on application of existing knowledge. Poisonous plants can be categorized using both acceptability to livestock and a plant's toxic potential. Acceptability encompasses forage qualities such as taste and chemistry (i.e., nutrient and toxin concentrations) and postingestive feedback from an animal's daily and long-term (e.g., body condition) nutritional and toxicological state. Toxic potential reflects aspects of plant chemistry, including seasonal or other changes in concentration or functionality of the toxin(s), and type of toxicity (i.e., acute or chronic). Persistent livestock losses to poisonous plants may indicate that ranges ar...
Forage induced disorders are not uncommon. These may be the result of poor harvesting and storage, s...
Information is presented to describe various disease syndromes in livestock resulting from the inges...
Plant poisonings in livestock are uncommon, but feed incidents involving some plant components of a ...
In recent years livestock death losses from poisonous plants in the western United States have avera...
Early approaches to management for the purpose of reducing or minimizing animal losses due to plant ...
Livestock poisoning by toxic plants is a relatively common problem in pastures and rangelands and it...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...
Poisonous plants rank high among the causes of economic loss to the livestock industry. Losses come ...
Grasslands are critical infrastructure for most cow/calf operations. Quality and abundance of pastur...
Management strategies based on toxin level in the plant, animal susceptibility, and grazing behavior...
1 online resource (PDF, 14 pages)This archival publication may not reflect current scientific knowl...
Introduction; Factors influencing toxicity; Management to reduce livestock poisoning; Environmental ...
Moderate stocking with cattle, sheep, and goats in a 4-pasture deferred-rotation system or light con...
12 pp., 1 tablePoisonous plants are among the most significant causes of economic loss sustained eac...
Forage induced disorders are not uncommon. These may be the result of poor harvesting and storage, s...
Information is presented to describe various disease syndromes in livestock resulting from the inges...
Plant poisonings in livestock are uncommon, but feed incidents involving some plant components of a ...
In recent years livestock death losses from poisonous plants in the western United States have avera...
Early approaches to management for the purpose of reducing or minimizing animal losses due to plant ...
Livestock poisoning by toxic plants is a relatively common problem in pastures and rangelands and it...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...
Poisonous plants rank high among the causes of economic loss to the livestock industry. Losses come ...
Grasslands are critical infrastructure for most cow/calf operations. Quality and abundance of pastur...
Management strategies based on toxin level in the plant, animal susceptibility, and grazing behavior...
1 online resource (PDF, 14 pages)This archival publication may not reflect current scientific knowl...
Introduction; Factors influencing toxicity; Management to reduce livestock poisoning; Environmental ...
Moderate stocking with cattle, sheep, and goats in a 4-pasture deferred-rotation system or light con...
12 pp., 1 tablePoisonous plants are among the most significant causes of economic loss sustained eac...
Forage induced disorders are not uncommon. These may be the result of poor harvesting and storage, s...
Information is presented to describe various disease syndromes in livestock resulting from the inges...
Plant poisonings in livestock are uncommon, but feed incidents involving some plant components of a ...