POISON SEDGE was first suspected of being toxic to livestock in Western Australia nearly 80 years ago. Sudden deaths of sheep grazing areas on which poison sedge grew have been reported from many regions from Geraldton to Scott River. This article reports a case of poisoning in the field, and the experimental reproduction of poison sedge toxicity in pen-fed sheep
TOXIC plants have caused considerable economic loss to stock raisers since the early days of settlem...
Cabbage poison is a plant of bitter and disagreeable taste, not readily eaten by stock, but field ev...
Poisonous plants rank high among the causes of economic loss to the livestock industry. Losses come ...
Every year losses of stock amounting to thousands of head, occur in Western Australia as the result ...
In recent years livestock death losses from poisonous plants in the western United States have avera...
During the afternoon of April 14 of this year, a flock of 800 sheep on a property in the Carnamah di...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...
This report includes data on utilization of loco plant by sheep on winter range, a comparison of the...
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,...
Wimmera ryegrass toxicity has been reported for many years to affect sheep and occasionally cattle i...
From the earliest days of settlement in Western Australia, native species of J- plants have been res...
The genus Isotropis is restricted to Australia. Of the total of nine species six are recorded in Wes...
Sheep are more resistent to larkspur poisoning than cattle. Grazing larkspur with sheep before cattl...
THIS article deals with heart-leaf poison, river poison and Stirling Range poison, all more or less ...
TOXIC plants have caused considerable economic loss to stock raisers since the early days of settlem...
Cabbage poison is a plant of bitter and disagreeable taste, not readily eaten by stock, but field ev...
Poisonous plants rank high among the causes of economic loss to the livestock industry. Losses come ...
Every year losses of stock amounting to thousands of head, occur in Western Australia as the result ...
In recent years livestock death losses from poisonous plants in the western United States have avera...
During the afternoon of April 14 of this year, a flock of 800 sheep on a property in the Carnamah di...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...
This report includes data on utilization of loco plant by sheep on winter range, a comparison of the...
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,...
Wimmera ryegrass toxicity has been reported for many years to affect sheep and occasionally cattle i...
From the earliest days of settlement in Western Australia, native species of J- plants have been res...
The genus Isotropis is restricted to Australia. Of the total of nine species six are recorded in Wes...
Sheep are more resistent to larkspur poisoning than cattle. Grazing larkspur with sheep before cattl...
THIS article deals with heart-leaf poison, river poison and Stirling Range poison, all more or less ...
TOXIC plants have caused considerable economic loss to stock raisers since the early days of settlem...
Cabbage poison is a plant of bitter and disagreeable taste, not readily eaten by stock, but field ev...
Poisonous plants rank high among the causes of economic loss to the livestock industry. Losses come ...