Animal biotechnology -- Switzerland : Consensus & controversies in animal biotechnology : an interactive legislative approach to animal biotechnology in Denmark, Switzerland, and the Netherlands / Lonneke Poort
Animal breeding -- Experiments : Experimental evolution : concepts, methods, and applications of selection experiments / edited by Theodore Garland, Jr., Michael R. Rose
c2009
1
Animal breeding -- History : The perfection of nature : animals, breeding, and race in the Renaissance / Mackenzie Cooley
Animal breeding -- Scotland : This farming life. [Series 1], Ep. 1 / filmed and directed by Jane Handa, Calum Angus MacKay, Alison Pinkney ; BBC Scotland Documentaries production
Animal breeds. : On the domesticated animals of the British Islands : comprehending the natural and economical history of species and varieties; the description of the properties of external form; and observations on the principles and practice of breeding / By David Low
Here are entered works on the eating of woody plants and plant parts by herbivorous animals. Works on the eating of grasses by herbivorous animals are entered under Grazing --subdivisions Effect of browsing on and Seedlings--Effect of browsing on under individual plants and groups of plants, e.g. Forest plants--Effect of browsing on; Trees--Seedlings--Effect of browsing on
Animal carcasses -- Biodegradation. : Carrion ecology, evolution, and their applications / editors, M. Eric Benbow, Jeffery K. Tomberlin, and Aaron M. Tarone
Institutional committees established to protect the welfare of animals used in research and education. The 1971 NIH Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals introduced the policy that institutions using warm-blooded animals in projects supported by NIH grants either be accredited by a recognized professional laboratory animal accrediting body or establish its own committee to evaluate animal care; the Public Health Service adopted a policy in 1979 requiring such committees; and the 1985 amendments to the Animal Welfare Act mandate review and approval of federally funded research with animals by a formally designated Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC)
Assistants to a veterinarian, biological or biomedical researcher, or other scientist who are engaged in the care and management of animals, and who are trained in basic principles of animal life processes and routine laboratory and animal health care procedures. (Facts on File Dictionary of Health Care Management, 1988)
Assistants to a veterinarian, biological or biomedical researcher, or other scientist who are engaged in the care and management of animals, and who are trained in basic principles of animal life processes and routine laboratory and animal health care procedures. (Facts on File Dictionary of Health Care Management, 1988)
Institutional committees established to protect the welfare of animals used in research and education. The 1971 NIH Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals introduced the policy that institutions using warm-blooded animals in projects supported by NIH grants either be accredited by a recognized professional laboratory animal accrediting body or establish its own committee to evaluate animal care; the Public Health Service adopted a policy in 1979 requiring such committees; and the 1985 amendments to the Animal Welfare Act mandate review and approval of federally funded research with animals by a formally designated Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC)
Committees established by professional societies, health facilities, or other institutions to consider decisions that have bioethical implications. The role of these committees may include consultation, education, mediation, and/or review of policies and practices. Committees that consider the ethical dimensions of patient care are ETHICS COMMITTEES, CLINICAL; committees established to protect the welfare of research subjects are ETHICS COMMITTEES, RESEARCH
Assistants to a veterinarian, biological or biomedical researcher, or other scientist who are engaged in the care and management of animals, and who are trained in basic principles of animal life processes and routine laboratory and animal health care procedures. (Facts on File Dictionary of Health Care Management, 1988)
Assistants to a veterinarian, biological or biomedical researcher, or other scientist who are engaged in the care and management of animals, and who are trained in basic principles of animal life processes and routine laboratory and animal health care procedures. (Facts on File Dictionary of Health Care Management, 1988)
Animal chemical ecology -- Congresses. : Chemical ecology, odour communication in animals : scientific aspects, practical uses, and economic prospects : proceedings of the Advanced Research Institute on Chemical Ecology, Odour Communication in Animals, held in Noordwijkerhout, The Netherlands, 24-30 September 1978 / sponsored by the NATO Special Programme Panel on Eco-Sciences ; editor, F. J. Ritter