Open AccessJournal Article
Diagnosis of copper deficiency in cattle
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About: This article is published in Javma-journal of The American Veterinary Medical Association. The article was published on 01 Jun 1992. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Copper deficiency.
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Citations
Role of dietary copper in enhancing resistance to Escherichia coli mastitis.
TL;DR: Copper supplementation reduced the clinical response during experimental E. coli mastitis, but duration was unchanged, and plasma ceruloplasmin and Fe, dry matter intake and milk production did not differ.
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Copper and Zinc Nutritional Issues for Agricultural Animal Production.
TL;DR: Livestock have presented unique requirements and toxicity issues depending on the species for the various concentrations of Cu and Zn and their interactions with other nutrients especially Fe, Se, Mo, and S.
Bioavailability of copper from copper glycinate in steers fed high dietary sulfur and molybdenum.
TL;DR: Results of this study suggest that Cu from CuGly may be more available than CuSO(4) when supplemented to diets high in S and Mo.
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Cattle as biomonitors of soil arsenic, copper, and zinc concentrations in Galicia (NW Spain).
M. López Alonso,José Luis Benedito,Marta Miranda,Cristina Castillo,Joaquín Hernández,Richard F. Shore +5 more
TL;DR: Calves may not be sensitive enough biomonitors of background variation in soil levels, although they may be useful for monitoring anthropogenic arsenic contamination, and copper and zinc liver levels increased progressively with soil levels.
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Effect of diets with different calcium and phosphorus contents on the skeletal development and blood chemistry of growing great danes
I. Schoenmakers,Herman A.W. Hazewinkel,George Voorhout,Cathy S. Carlson,Daniel C. Richardson +4 more
TL;DR: The skeletal development of three groups of great dane dogs, fed a diet composed according to the published nutritional requirements for dogs (controls) or with increased calcium or calcium and phosphorus content, was examined radiographically, histologically and biochemically.
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