Management of Bulls, An Issue of Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 1st Edition
Author :
Edited by Lee Jones, DVM, MS and Joseph C. Dalton, PhD
In this issue of Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, guest editors Drs. Lee Jones and Joseph C. Dalton bring their considerable expertise to the topic of Management of Bulls. Top experts in the field offer current discussions
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In this issue of Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, guest editors Drs. Lee Jones and Joseph C. Dalton bring their considerable expertise to the topic of Management of Bulls. Top experts in the field offer current discussions of assessing the reproductive potential of bulls, diagnosing disease or causes of infertility, and determining appropriate course of treatment or prognosis for recovery of injured bulls. This issue also provides up-to-date information regarding the contribution of sires to success or failure of reproductive programs in beef and dairy herds, and foundational material for success with AI (semen storage, handling, and site of deposition).
In this issue of Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, guest editors Drs. Lee Jones and Joseph C. Dalton bring their considerable expertise to the topic of Management of Bulls. Top experts in the field offer current discussions of assessing the reproductive potential of bulls, diagnosing disease or causes of infertility, and determining appropriate course of treatment or prognosis for recovery of injured bulls. This issue also provides up-to-date information regarding the contribution of sires to success or failure of reproductive programs in beef and dairy herds, and foundational material for success with AI (semen storage, handling, and site of deposition).
Key Features
Contains 13 relevant, practice-oriented topics including semen quality and field fertility (beef and dairy); physical evaluation of the breeding bull; nutrition and development; medical and surgical management of conditions of the penis and prepuce; management of lameness in breeding bulls; genomics and bull fertility; and more.
Provides in-depth clinical reviews on management of bulls, offering actionable insights for clinical practice.
Presents the latest information on this timely, focused topic under the leadership of experienced editors in the field. Authors synthesize and distill the latest research and practice guidelines to create clinically significant, topic-based reviews.
Author Information
Edited by Lee Jones, DVM, MS, Associate Professor, College of Veterinary Medicine,University of Georgia and Joseph C. Dalton, PhD, Professor, Extension Dairy Specialist, Animal, Veterinary and Food Science, University of Idaho
Edited by Lee Jones, DVM, MS, Associate Professor, College of Veterinary Medicine,University of Georgia and Joseph C. Dalton, PhD, Professor, Extension Dairy Specialist, Animal, Veterinary and Food Science, University of Idaho
Nutrition and Sexual Development in Bulls Physical Evaluation of Beef Bulls The Bull Breeding Soundness Examination and Its Application in the Production Setting Field Morphology and Interpretation Ancillary Methods for Semen Evaluation Medical and Surgical Management of Conditions of the Penis and Prepuce Abnormalities of the Scrotum and Testes Bovine Lameness from the Ground up Sexually Transmitted Diseases of Bulls Impact of the Sire on Pregnancy Loss Impact of Sire on Embryo Development and Pregnancy Implementing Fixed-Time Artificial Insemination Programs in Beef Herds Frozen Bovine Semen Storage, Semen Handling, and Site of Deposition Considerations for Using Natural Service with Estrous Synchronization Programs Managing Beef Bulls During the Off-Season Genomics and Dairy Bull Fertility
https://www.asia.elsevierhealth.com/management-of-bulls-an-issue-of-veterinary-clinics-of-north-america-food-animal-practice-9780443130212.html309666Management of Bulls, An Issue of Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practicehttps://www.asia.elsevierhealth.com/media/catalog/product/9/7/9780443130212_2.jpg89.0998.99USDInStock/Veterinary/Veterinary Medicine/Clinics/Veterinary/Veterinary Medicine/Japan Titles/Clinics/Veterinary/Veterinary Medicine/Clinics5054563525504152598435263160505466643350974388725In this issue of <i>Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice</i>, guest editors Drs. Lee Jones and Joseph C. Dalton bring their considerable expertise to the topic of <b>Management of Bulls</b>. Top experts in the field offer current discussions of assessing the reproductive potential of bulls, diagnosing disease or causes of infertility, and determining appropriate course of treatment or prognosis for recovery of injured bulls. This issue also provides up-to-date information regarding the contribution of sires to success or failure of reproductive programs in beef and dairy herds, and foundational material for success with AI (semen storage, handling, and site of deposition). In this issue of <i>Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice</i>, guest editors Drs. Lee Jones and Joseph C. Dalton bring their considerable expertise to the topic of <b>Management of Bulls</b>. Top experts in the field offer current discussions of assessing the reproductive potential of bulls, diagnosing disease or causes of infertility, and determining appropriate course of treatment or prognosis for recovery of injured bulls. This issue also provides up-to-date information regarding the contribution of sires to success or failure of reproductive programs in beef and dairy herds, and foundational material for success with AI (semen storage, handling, and site of deposition).00add-to-cart97804431302122024ProfessionalEdited by Lee Jones, DVM, MS and Joseph C. Dalton, PhD20241Book152w x 229h (6.00" x 9.00")Elsevier240Jan 24, 2024IN STOCKEdited by <STRONG>Lee Jones</STRONG>, DVM, MS, Associate Professor, College of Veterinary Medicine,University of Georgia and <STRONG>Joseph C. Dalton</STRONG>, PhD, Professor, Extension Dairy Specialist, Animal, Veterinary and Food Science, University of IdahoClinicsClinicsThe Clinics: Veterinary MedicineUnited StatesYesYesNoNoPlease SelectPlease SelectPlease Select