scholarly journals Proceedings of the British Society of Animal Science

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-284

2005 ◽  
Vol 2005 ◽  
pp. 247-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Jarvis ◽  
J.E.L. Day ◽  
B. Reed

Animal science research is important in relation to our understanding of animals, their function and performance, and their relationships with their social and physical environments. Animal science research covers a wide range of disciplines and so can lead to the use of a variety of experimental techniques on animals for many different purposes. This has the potential to lead to a multitude of diverse ethical issues. Members of the British Society of Animal Science and authors of papers submitted to the Society for publication come from countries around the world and therefore are subject to differences in legislative requirements and recommendations regarding animal experimentation. These legal requirements, along with the ethical implications of the research must be fully considered before any experimental work is undertaken.



2005 ◽  
Vol 80 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-1

Current feed evaluation systems for ruminants include very simple models of intermediary metabolism – either single, static coefficients or simple equations to describe the efficiency with which the energy and nitrogen available for absorption are converted into milk and meat. For example, the revised UK system ‘Feed into milk’ defines a fixed efficiency of utilization of metabolizable protein (MP) for milk production of 0·68 (Thomas, 2004). Such a simple ‘efficiency’ coefficient is the tip of the tip of a rather large iceberg, representing the metabolism of the end-products of digestion between the point of their absorption into the animal and their use for the synthesis of milk and meat. The complex biochemistry of metabolism in the tissues of the gut (the portal-drained viscera, PDV), the liver and other internal organs, the adipose tissue, muscle and mammary gland: all reduced (a term used nonpejoratively) to single coefficients or simple equations. Simple and very useful – up to a point.A Working Party established by the Agricultural and Food Research Council (AFRC) Technical Committee on Responses to Nutrients wrote, in 1998, ‘The present state of knowledge on the nutritional and hormonal interactions “in intermediary metabolism” is considerably inferior to the knowledge which exists with respect to the processes of ruminal and intestinal digestion, and thus to develop a satisfactory model of metabolism requires research not only in model construction but also in the physiology and biochemistry of animals.’ (AFRC, 1998). Perhaps contrary to the common perception of a contracting research base in farm animal science, the required research in physiology and biochemistry is continuing, research which is summarized and put in context by two review articles in this issue of Animal Science.Kristensen (2005) focuses on a key aspect of the ‘energy economy’ of the cow: the metabolism of volatile fatty acids (VFA) in the tissues of the digestive tract and the liver. Using novel techniques, Kristensen and colleagues have re-examined (and overturned?) one of the key paradigms of ruminant physiology, that a large proportion of the VFA generated by fermentation in the rumen is metabolised during absorption.Researchers from Canada and the UK are untangling factors affecting the partitioning of absorbed amino acids between use for protein synthesis and catabolism and this topic is reviewed by Lapierre et al. (2005). This paper emphasizes the important concept that ‘efficiency of utilization’ of absorbed amino acids is as much a function of demand (in the lactating cow, principally from the mammary gland) as it is of supply.The statement from AFRC (1998), quoted above, demands two activities, physiological research and model construction. These authors continue: ‘It is likely, however, that the best progress will be achieved if both types of research are undertaken in parallel.’ In a third review article in this volume, Hanigan (2005) summarizes the ‘state of the art’ in the simulation of PDV and hepatic metabolism, demonstrating how a computer model is a quantitative library in which to store new knowledge as well as a driver of future research.All three papers are based on presentations given to the 2004 annual meeting of the British Society of Animal Science. They demonstrate ‘the current state of the art’ for these important topics in ruminant physiology, offering a below the water-line look at these rather large and often forbidding icebergs. The reviews should serve as a valuable summary for those already working in this field of research, a concise and convenient introduction for those entering the field, and a window onto the future of practical systems for predicting the responses of dairy cows to the feedingstuffs they are offered.



1995 ◽  
Vol 1995 ◽  
pp. 13-13
Author(s):  
J. C. Kerr

In recent years, the emphasis on reproductive performance in pigs has increased, although the favourable impact of improving reproductive performance on the overall efficiency of production has long been recognised. There is widespread agreement that increasing the number of pigs per sow per year should be a major objective of the pig industry, particularly as limits in fat reduction are approached. The 1994 British Society of Animal Science Braude Scholarship was used to investigate current research in the area of swine reproduction and identify particular areas of concern as perceived by the North American pig industry. The main objectives of the scholarship were to (1) present a paper at the Fifth World Congress on Genetics Applied to Livestock Production (2) visit research establishments in the USA to discuss current research projects in pigs, with particular emphasis on genetic variation in reproduction traits and (3) visit major pig breeding companies in the USA to discuss the application of research results in modern pig breeding programmes and the required future research.



1969 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 405-413 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. P. McMeekan

Editorial noteThe first Hammond Memorial Lecture was given in London in March 1969 by Dr C. P. McMeekan, CBE, formerly Director of the Ruakura Research Centre in New Zealand, afterwards on the staff of, and currently consultant to, the World Bank. Apart from its special interest to those engaged in animal science, the lecture contained much of general interest to natural and social scientists and we are grateful to Dr McMeekan, the Hammond Memorial Trustees and the British Society for Animal Production, under whose auspices the lecture was delivered, for permission to print a substantial portion of it in the Journal of Biosocial Science.Some of the selected material is provocative. For instance, it would be interesting to know the basis of the assumption that world population having risen to 6000 million by the end of this century, will then stabilize. Again, many will disagree with the estimates of unused usable land. But all of the material stimulates thought and we are glad to have the opportunity of publishing it.After discussing the outstanding achievements of Sir John Hammond and the progress of animal science generally, Dr McMeekan continued:





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