| Blog results | Results 1 - 10 of about 1,147 for diclofenac cattle. (0.32 seconds) |
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| 18 Nov 2009 by Mahseer Conservancy However with veterinary Diclofenac banned, now human-use Diclofenac (which is the same product with the same effects on vultures) has been subverted to the livestock market. In almost every village in India there will be a small, non- descript drugstore and in perhaps a large percentage of these shops local dairy farmers, probably completely unaware of the ban or consequences will be buying Diclofenac for their cattle. When talking to people they relate how they used to ... Mahseer Conservancy - http://www.mahseerconservancy.org/blog/ [ More results from Mahseer Conservancy ] |
| 26 Oct 2009 by arzan sam wadia We are working to develop this into a dipstick test where we can instantly, in the field, detect if diclofenac is present in cattle or vulture carcasses,” says Prakash. He is also helping to formulate plans for selected zoos across the ... Parsi Khabar - http://parsikhabar.net/ [ More results from Parsi Khabar ] |
| 11 Jun 2009 by THAKURIA Nava ... be possible since vultures appear to be particularly susceptible to a ubiquitous anti-inflammatory veterinary drug called diclofenac. It is cheap and can be used for treating cattle, buffalo, sheep and goats as well as human beings. ... Europe Solidaire Sans Frontières - http://www.europe-solidaire.org/ |
| 19 Nov 2009 by sanjay-pad The decline has been widely attributed to poisoning by diclofenac, which is used as veterinary non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug , leaving traces in cattle carcasses which when fed on leads to kidney failure in birds. ... wild-o-graphies - http://wild-o-graphies.blogspot.com/ |
| 24 Jul 2009 by Rhishja Larson to forest officials, bearded vultures were spared India's massive diclofenac poisoning that killed over 97% of the country's vultures because they inhabit higher elevations in regions where cattle have not been given the [...] ... Comments for EcoWorldly - http://ecoworldly.com/ - References [ More results from Comments for EcoWorldly ] |
| 5 Sep 2009 Vulture populations have declined more than 95% in South Asia due to diclofenac, an anti-inflammatory drug used on cattle which acts as a poison to vultures. Just in time for International Vulture Awareness Day (today, September 5, ... TreeHugger - http://www.treehugger.com/ - References [ More results from TreeHugger ] |
| 14 Aug 2008 by Charlie In the case of vultures, I guess it's too much to ask people to understand that the consequences of feeding diclofenac to cattle to prolong the ability to work or supply milk (more so than meat — Hindu is the predominant religion in ... 10000 Birds - http://10000birds.com/ - References [ More results from 10000 Birds ] |
| 21 Aug 2006 This is the first detailed study of the exposure of vultures to diclofenac and the risk of death posed by each exposure. By improving the accuracy of the model of the relationship between diclofenac in cattle carcasses and vulture ... University of Cambridge News Stories - http://www.admin.cam.ac.uk/news/ - References |
| 3 Mar 2008 by Robert Taylor Vultures are more susceptible to the toxic affects of diclofenac, in particular acute kidney failure, than are other species. In India, cattle do not usually go into the human food chain and the dead ones would be left for the ... CABI Blogs: hand picked... and carefully sorted - http://cabiblog.typepad.com/hand_picked/ - References |
| 22 Oct 2009 by Loren Reply:I moved to a cattle ranch 2 years ago, when Granuloma Annulare started on my neck...I've done all the treatments, the Dermatologist offered laser, however with consequential scars. I am using clear nail polish consistently to ... skin disease help - http://skin-disease5.blogspot.com/ |
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