Toxic Pimelea species are native plants found throughout inland grazing regions of Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia, the Northern Territory and Western Australia, extending over about one third to a half of Australia’s pastoral lands. In certain years, pimelea poisoning has serious economic consequences for the pastoral cattle industry through loss of production, stock deaths and the costs of supplementary feeding and agistment in South Australia, New South Wales and Queensland. The results of field and laboratory studies have been incorporated together with documented existing knowledge to form the basis of this guide, “Understanding Pimelea Poisoning of Cattle”. It is hoped that this guide will enable landholders and adviso...
Leucaena leucocephala (leucaena) is a tropical leguminous forage tree; when planted with companion g...
Poisonous plants are major causes of economic loss to the livestock industry. Each year these plants...
During grazing sheep can have access to a wide variety of poisonous plants, mycotoxins, heavy metals...
Pimelea poisoning is an ongoing, periodically serious problem for cattle producers in inland Austral...
Poisoning of cattle by plants of the Pimelea species incurs heavy losses to individual producers in ...
Aims to determine whether the toxins of Pimelea can be immunogenic and if so, to investigate whether...
A dense population of Pimelea trichostachya plants (Family Thymelaeaceae) in pasture poisoned a hors...
Pimelea species (or desert riceflower) are small native plants endemic to the drier inland pastoral ...
Cattle grazing in arid rangelands of Australia suffer periodic extensive and serious poisoning by th...
Pimelea species (or desert riceflower) are small native plants endemic to the drier inland pastoral ...
Improved pastures based on the leguminous shrub Leucaena leucocephala (leucaena) are the most produc...
Toxic larkspurs (Delphinium species) poison and kill cattle in western North America, and cattle dea...
12 pp., 1 tablePoisonous plants are among the most significant causes of economic loss sustained eac...
Abstract The focus of this chapter is the indigenous flora of Australia and New Zealand that has bee...
Over the last 60 years, grass tetany has been recognised as a significant lethal condition in sheep ...
Leucaena leucocephala (leucaena) is a tropical leguminous forage tree; when planted with companion g...
Poisonous plants are major causes of economic loss to the livestock industry. Each year these plants...
During grazing sheep can have access to a wide variety of poisonous plants, mycotoxins, heavy metals...
Pimelea poisoning is an ongoing, periodically serious problem for cattle producers in inland Austral...
Poisoning of cattle by plants of the Pimelea species incurs heavy losses to individual producers in ...
Aims to determine whether the toxins of Pimelea can be immunogenic and if so, to investigate whether...
A dense population of Pimelea trichostachya plants (Family Thymelaeaceae) in pasture poisoned a hors...
Pimelea species (or desert riceflower) are small native plants endemic to the drier inland pastoral ...
Cattle grazing in arid rangelands of Australia suffer periodic extensive and serious poisoning by th...
Pimelea species (or desert riceflower) are small native plants endemic to the drier inland pastoral ...
Improved pastures based on the leguminous shrub Leucaena leucocephala (leucaena) are the most produc...
Toxic larkspurs (Delphinium species) poison and kill cattle in western North America, and cattle dea...
12 pp., 1 tablePoisonous plants are among the most significant causes of economic loss sustained eac...
Abstract The focus of this chapter is the indigenous flora of Australia and New Zealand that has bee...
Over the last 60 years, grass tetany has been recognised as a significant lethal condition in sheep ...
Leucaena leucocephala (leucaena) is a tropical leguminous forage tree; when planted with companion g...
Poisonous plants are major causes of economic loss to the livestock industry. Each year these plants...
During grazing sheep can have access to a wide variety of poisonous plants, mycotoxins, heavy metals...