Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAbraham Gregory Modified over 9 years ago
1
Animal Contributions to Human Needs
2
What animals are used for production purposes?
3
SCIENCE n a process through which nature is STUDIED, DISCOVERED, and UNDERSTOOD.
4
Animal Science n The PROCESS through which LIVESTOCK ANIMALS are STUDIED and UNDERSTOOD.
5
Animal Science n Involves BREEDING, feeding, care and MANAGEMENT of animals; MARKETING and PROCESSING of animals and their PRODUCTS based on knowledge gained through practical EXPERIENCE and RESEARCH.
6
Domestication n To adapt an animal for human use
7
Five requirements for domestication n 1.The animal is VALUED and there are clear PURPOSES for which it is kept. n 2.The animal’s BREEDING is subject to human control. n 3.The animal’s SURVIVAL depends upon humans.
8
Five requirements for domestication n 4.The animal’s BEHAVIOR (psychology) is changed in domestication. n 5.Morphological (STRUCTURAL) characteristics have appeared which occur rarely if at all in the wild.
9
Wild animal n not GENETICALLY altered by artificial selection for use by humans n Example
10
Tame wild animal n a wild animal that, through intervention of man, has adapted BEHAVIORALLY so as to be useful to humans. n Example
11
Exotic animal n a wild animal belonging to a species whose historic native range lies totally outside NORTH AMERICA n Example
12
Domestic animal n an animal that has been genetically altered from the original wild species for use by humans through ARTIFICIAL SELECTION n Example
13
Feral animal n a DOMESTIC animal that lives in the WILD with no human assistance n Example
14
Feral population n a REPRODUCING group of FERAL animals n Example
15
Species n a group of closely related animals that can INTERBREED and produce FERTILE offspring n Example
16
Breed n animals of common ORIGIN with characteristics that distinguish them from other groups within the same SPECIES n Example
17
Type n animals of the same SPECIES that are grouped together based on the PRODUCTS they produce n Example
18
Terms of Domesticated Animals
19
Cattle n Species n Bovine
20
Cattle n Group n Herd
21
Cattle n Adult Male n Bull
22
Cattle n Adult Female n Cow
23
Cattle n Young Male n Bull Calf
24
Cattle n Young Female n Heifer Calf
25
Cattle n Newborn n Calf
26
Cattle n Castrated Male n Bullock or Steer
27
Cattle n Offspring w/Dam n Calf at Foot or Suckling
28
Cattle n Birthing n Calving
29
Cattle n Mating n Serving
30
Sheep n Species n Ovine
31
Sheep n Group n Flock
32
Sheep n Adult Male n Ram, Buck, or Tup
33
Sheep n Adult Female n Ewe
34
Sheep n Young Male n Ram Lamb or Buck Lamb
35
Sheep n Young Female n Ewe Lamb
36
Sheep n Newborn n Lamb
37
Sheep n Castrated Male n Wether
38
Sheep n Offspring w/Dam n Suckling
39
Sheep n Birthing n Lambing
40
Sheep n Mating n Tupping
41
Goats n Species n Caprine
42
Goats n Group n Flock or Band
43
Goats n Adult Male n Buck or Billy
44
Goats n Adult Female n Doe or Nanny
45
Goats n Young Male n Buckling
46
Goats n Young Female n Goatling
47
Goats n Newborn n Kid
48
Goats n Castrated Male n Wether
49
Goats n Offspring w/Dam n Suckling
50
Goats n Birthing n Kidding
51
Goats n Mating n Serving
52
Swine n Species n Swine or Sus
53
Swine n Group n Drove
54
Swine n Adult Male n Boar
55
Swine n Adult Female n Sow
56
Swine n Young Male n Boar Pig or Boarling
57
Swine n Young Female n Gilt
58
Swine n Newborn n Pig, Piglet, Pigling
59
Swine n Castrated Male n Barrow, Stag, Hog
60
Swine n Offspring w/Dam n Suckling
61
Swine n Birthing n Farrowing
62
Swine n Mating n Coupling
63
Poultry n Species n Gallus
64
Poultry n Group n Flock
65
Poultry n Adult Male n Rooster, Cock
66
Poultry n Adult Female n Hen
67
Poultry n Young Male n Cockerel
68
Poultry n Young Female n Pullet
69
Poultry n Newborn n Chick
70
Poultry n Castrated Male n Capon
71
Poultry n Offspring w/Dam n Clutch, Brood
72
Poultry n Birthing n Hatching
73
Poultry n Mating n Covering
74
Horse n Species n Equine
75
Horse n Group n Herd, Band, etc.
76
Horse n Adult Male n Stallion or Stud
77
Horse n Adult Female n Mare
78
Horse n Young Male n Colt
79
Horse n Young Female n Filly
80
Horse n Newborn n Foal
81
Horse n Castrated Male n Gelding
82
Horse n Offspring w/Dam n Suckling or Foal at Side
83
Horse n Birthing n Foaling
84
Horse n Mating n Serving
85
Functions of Livestock n Food n Clothing n Power n Recreation
86
Food n Meat n Eggs n Milk n Honey
87
Clothing n Wool n Leather n Hair/Fur n Feathers
88
Power n Horses n Mules, Donkeys, Burros n Llamas, Alpacas n Oxen, Water buffalo, reindeer, yak, camels
89
Recreation n Pleasure Horses n Purebred Herds and Flocks n Livestock Exhibitions, Shows, Rodeos n Horse Racing
90
Mainstream Domestic Animals n Dairy Cattle n Beef Cattle n Sheep (Wool, Meat, Dairy) n Swine n Goats (Mohair, Milk, Meat, Cashmere) n Horses, Mules, Donkeys, etc n Poultry
91
Non-Traditional Domestic Animals n Ostrich & Emu n Deer and Elk n Bison n Aquaculture n Llamas and Alpacas n Alligators n Rare Breeds of Domestic Animals
92
Types of Livestock
93
Cattle n Beef Type n Dairy Type n Dual Purpose n Multi-Purpose
94
Sheep n Wool type –Fine –Medium –Long –Colored n Meat or Mutton type n Dual Purpose n Dairy Type
95
Swine n Lard Type n Bacon Type n Meat Type
96
Horses n Draft Type n Racing n Ranch Work/Stock Horse n Trotting n Pacers
97
Poultry n Eggs (Layers) n Meat (Broilers) n Ornamental n Cock Fighting
98
Why Farmers Use Livestock n Converts feed to meat; feed generally brings more money when marketed through livestock n Utilizes labor the year around n Allows for greater production capacity and increases opportunity for making profits n Helps maintain fertility of the land
99
Why Farmers Use Livestock n May more fully utilize capital, machinery and wasteland (range). n Utilizes roughage that can’t readily be sold (poor hay, corn stalks, straw, etc.) n Diversifies that farm and/or ranch n Personal satisfaction of working with domesticated animals
100
Animal Protein n Animal proteins are superior to vegetable proteins for humans n Animal proteins have improved amino acid balance over vegetable protein n Producing animals for meat, mike, eggs, etc. is not as efficient as compared to cereal grains produced for humans alone
101
Ruminants n Have a four compartment stomach n Can digest roughages n Manufacture essential amino acids and energy n Examples include: –Cattle –Sheep –Goats
102
Non-ruminants (Monogastric) n Have a single compartment stomach n Need supplementary sources of amino acids and vitamins n Examples include: –Swine –Poultry –Horses
103
Contributions to Food Needs n Vegetarianism -- started in India, due to long-term population pressure and scarcity of feed and forage for animals - - also religious concerns; all life is sacred. n Rising Population Pressures -- particularly in developing regions force people to consume foods of plant origin
104
Contributions to food Needs
105
Contributions to Food Needs n Meat -- is important in diet; excellent balance of amino acids, vitamins and especially Vitamin B 12 n Milk -- approximately 90% of milk for human consumption in the world comes from cattle n Over 85% of the world population desires food of animal origin
106
Beef Cattle Production n Texas n Kansas n Nebraska n Oklahoma n California n Utah’s Rank 28th
107
Dairy Cattle Production n California n Wisconsin n New York n Pennsylvania n Michigan n Utah’s Rank 25th
108
Sheep Production n Texas n California n Wyoming n Colorado n South Dakota n Utah’s Rank 7th
109
Goat Production n Texas n New Mexico n Arizona n Oklahoma n California n Utah’s Rank ?
110
Swine Production n Iowa n North Carolina n Michigan n Illinois n Indiana n Utah’s Rank 20th
111
Poultry Production (L) n California n Ohio n Indiana n Pennsylvania n Iowa n Utah’s Rank 33rd
112
Poultry Production (B) n Arkansas n Georgia n Alabama n North Carolina n Mississippi n Utah’s Rank ??
113
Turkey Production n North Carolina n Minnesota n Arkansas n Missouri n California n Utah’s Rank 14th
114
# of Farms and Ranches n Texas n Missouri n Iowa n Kentucky n Minnesota n Utah’s Rank 36 th
115
Land in Farms/Ranches n Texas n Montana n Kansas n Nebraska n New Mexico
116
Utah’s Rank 28 th Utah’s Rank in Other Areas n Mink Production 2nd n Trout Production 6th n Honey Production 24th
118
A. Farming/Ranching n Manager n Foreman n Herdsman
119
Research n Production n Processing n Marketing n New equipment and use
120
Industry n Food processing n Pesticides and Herbicides n Feed Manufacturing n Dairy Processing
121
Business n Agricultural Banking n Farm Management n Grading and Packaging n Marketing
122
Education n Agriculture extension specialist n Agricultural education instructor n College instructor n Governmental agencies
123
Communications n Farm reporting n Market reporting n Radio n Television
124
Service n Inspection and regulation n Plant and animal quarantine n Foreign service n Agriculture consultant n Veterinary
125
Regulatory Agencies n FDA—Food and Drug Administration which must approve applications to investigate new animal drugs and feed additives. n EPA—Environmental Protection Agency which issues permits for some experiments involving animal health product testing.
126
Regulatory Agencies n USDA—United States Department of Agriculture which reviews research plans for vaccines or other animal biologicals. n FSIS—Food Safety and Inspection Service of the USDA which randomly tests slaughtered animals to ensure that meat is free of illegal residues.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.