Ag 501 test 3
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- The two major goat producing areas in the world are _____ and ______.
- Asia and Africa
- In the United States, Angora goats are located mostly in the state of _______.
- Texas
- The _______ and _______ dairy goat breeds yield milk high in milk fat content.
- American LaMancha and Nubians
- The ______ breed is popular because it produces a large quantity of low-fat milk (Holstein of the dairy goat breeds).
- Saanen
- The goat's udder has _____ divisions, each with its own glandular structure and teat.
- 2
- The goat has a ______ digestive system.
- Ruminant
- Goats can consume ______ percent of their body weight in dry matter per day.
- 5-7
- Goats are bred primarily during the months of ______ through _______.
- September - November
- Gestation in the goat is about ____ months long.
- 5
- Kids are weaned from milk or milk replacer at ____ to ____ weeks of age.
- 6 - 12
- _______ is a type but not a breed of goats that produce a fine underdown.
- Cashmere
- A goat will produce about _____ pounds of mohair per clipping.
- 6.5
- The standard lactation of dairy goats is _____ days.
- 305
- ______ is a meat from goats slaughtered at weaning or older.
- Chevon
- ______ is the dairy goat breed that has long, pendulant ears and produces a high butterfat milk.
- Nubians
- ________ is the dairy goat breed with no ears.
- American LaMancha
- _____ is the number of goats worldwide.
- 639 million
- ______ is the largest dairy goat breed and most popular in Israel, Europe, Austrailia, and New Zealand.
- Saanen
- The breed of goat that produce mohair is ______.
- Angora
- _______ is the orgin(area of the world) of cashmere.
- Asia
- Pygmy goats originated in ______.
- West Africa
- ______ are the shoots, twigs, and leaves of brush plants found growing on rangeland.
- Browse
- The condition in which the goat contains reproductive organs of both sexes is called _________; it is typically found when trying to breed for the polled condition.
- hermaphroditism
- Kids raised on bottles will consume _____ percent of their body weight per day.
- 8
- ______ is the breed of goat that originated in Turkey.
- Angora
- ________ is the meat goat breed from southern Africa.
- Boer Goats
- _____ is a small, flat, wingless insect with suckling mouthparrs that is parasitic on the skin of animals.
- Lice
- ______ is a disease that affects the central nervous system of young kids and induces head tremors, loss of coordination, and partial paralysis. In adult goats, arthritis affects the feet and other limb joints; a hard udder is common.
- Caprine Arthritis Encephalitis
- ______ is also called sore mouth.
- Contagious Ecthyma
- _____ are broadleaf plants.
- Forbs
- A 100 poung goat will normally yield a ____ pound carcass.
- 50
- Meat taken from mature goats is called ________.
- older goat
- The world goat record for milk production is from the ______ breed.
- Toggenburgs
- ________ is a genetic term describing when one gene controls the phenotype of more than one trait.
- Pleiotropic effect
- Buck kids that are not kept for breeding should be castrated by age ______.
- 2-5 days
- _________ is a disease in goats that causes Malta fever in humans.
- Brucellosis
- _________ is the most common type of infectious abortion in goats.
- Chlamydial abortion
- _______ is also known as overeating disease.
- enterotoxemia
- ________ is a highly fatal goat disorder caused by a soil organism penetrating a deep puncture wound.
- Tetanus
- ________ is a common U.S. reportable type of mange in goats.
- Psoroptic
- The optimum number of daylight hours for maximum milk yield is ______.
- 16 hours
- ________ parts blood must pass through the udder to produce one part milk.
- 300-500 lbs
- ______ is also known as syndactylism.
- Mull foot
- PTAT is the abbreviation for __________.
- Predicted transmitting ability for type
- Casting is used as a temporary treatment of _________.
- displaced abomasum
- ________ is also known as barn itch.
- Mange
- ________ is a cause of cattle grubs.
- Heel flies
- _________ is a zoonotic disorder that affects as many as 90 percent of dairy farms by this parasitic organism.
- Cryptosporidiosis
- ________ is a test for determination of BF% in milk.
- Babcock Test
- _______ was the year the Babcock test was developed.
- 1890
- ______ is the state that produces the most milk (total pounds)
- CA
- ______ is the state with the largest number of dairy cows.
- CA
- ________ is also called Illawara.
- Milking Shorthorn
- _______ is caused by a deficiency of vitamin E or Se in dairy calves.
-
White Muscle Disease
(AKA nutritional muscullar distrophy) - Another name for BSE is ______.
- Mad Cow Disease
- ________ are molds that develop on feed that produce toxins.
- alfatoxin
- The hormone _______ stimulates milk letdown.
- oxytocin
- The hormone _______ counteracts milk letdown.
- epinephrine
- The hormone _______ stimulates an increase of up to 20 percent more milk with only 5 percent more feed.
- BST (growth hormone)
- ______ is another name for a carousel-type milk barn.
- Rotary Barn
- _______ is the recommended breeding method for dairy cattle.
- Outbreeding
- An agent that destroys worms in the digestive tract is ________.
- anthelmintic
- The tendency of two or more traits that vary in the same direction or in opposite directions due to common forces or influences is known as __________
- correlation
- ______ is a chamber that connects the four teat cups to the milk line.
- Claw
- _______ is the standardization of lactation records to the level of yield that would have been attained by each cow if it had been a mature cow and calved in the month of the yar of highest calving frequency for its breed.
- Mature Equivalent (ME)
- _________ is a disease characterized by pneumonia or septicemia. The higest incidence occurs in animals subjected to stress.
- Shipping Fever
- _______ is also known as acetonemia.
- Ketosis
- ________ is a disease that causes chronic diarrhea and weight loss resulting from infection with the bacterium of Mycobacterium paratuberculosis.
- Johne's Disease
- _______ is also known as bacillary hemoglobinuria.
- Red Water Disease
- CSS stands for _______.
- Certified semen services
- _______ is caused by Mycobacterium bovis.
- Tuberculosis
- ______ is a viral disorder that causes lesions indistinguishable from those of foot and mouth disease.
- Vesicular stomatitis
- ________ is also known as bovine genital camplyobacteriosis.
- Vibriosis
- _______ is the common name for infectious bovine keratoconjuctivitis.
- Pink eye
- _______ is also called gas gangrene.
- Malignant edema
- _________ is the common name for bovine spongiform encephalopathy.
- Mad Cow Disease
- ________ is caused by Actinomycosis bovis.
- Lumpy Jaw (wooden tongue)
- ________ is the most commonly used test for diagnosis of leptospirosis in cattle.
- Microscopic Agglutination test (MAT)
- ______ is the common name for interdigital phlegmon.
- Foot Rot
- The primary milk secretion hormone is ________.
- prolactin
- The spores from the fatal disease _______ can liv in the soil for more than 60 years.
- Anthrax
- ________ is a fatal protozoan disease of cattle that destroys the red blood cells, causing anemia and death.
- Anaplasmosis
- _____ is the normal rectal temperature of a dairy cow.
- 101.5
- _______ is the mechanism that permits alternating vacuum and atmospheric pressure to exist between the teat cup liner and shell.
- Pulsator
- _______ is also known as traumatic gastritis
- Hardware Disease
- _______ is used to regularly evaluate whre an individual cow stands in body condition relative to the ideals for its stage of lactation.
- Body condition score
- Established colleges of agriculture in each state are called ______.
- Land Grant Act
- Intake crude protein that is broken down by microorganisms in the rumen is called ________.
- ruminal degrated intake protien
- MUN is an abbreviation for _______.
- Milk Urea Nitrogen
- _______ is the common name for runimal tympany.
- Bloat
- _______ should only be used as a last resort for the treatment of ruminal tympany.
- Trocar and cannula
- ______ is caused by a deficiency of iodine in the diet.
- Goiter
- _______ is caused by a deficiency of magnesium in the diet.
- Grass Tetany
- The disorder _______ is prevented by the use of DCADS.
- Milk Fever
- ______ is also known as hyperkeratosis.
- X Disease
- The Holstein Association uses _______ as a method of ranking bulls on their overall performance.
- Type Production Index (TPI)
- _______ is the common name for papillomatous digital dermatitis.
- Hairy Foot Warts
- ________ is also known as red nose.
- Infectious Bovine Rhinotracheitis
- ______ is one of the most commonly diagnosed viruses in bovine abortion cases and is easily prevented with vaccination and improved sanitation.
- Bovine Viral Diarrhea Virus (BVDV)
- ______ is caused by the heel fly.
- Grubs
- _______ are wingless, flattened insects.
- Lice
- ______ and ______ are two reportable external parasites common to dairy and beef cattle.
-
Sarcoptic Mange
Psoroptic Mange - ________ is the common name for nematodes.
- Roundworms
- ______ is an example of a trematode.
- Liver Fluke
- What law started experimental stations that manage diseases
- Hatch Act
- What law sends an agent to farms and teaches farmers what was found at the experimental stations.
- Smith-Lever Act
- Created a Cream Separator that acts as a centrifuge – cream rise to top
- Gustav DeLaval
- Created a test to test fat in milk products and TB testing in cattle.
- Samuel Babcock
- A disease caused by oils and lubricants
- X-Disease
- Tall fescue toxicosis is found in?
- Eastern U.S.
- Larkspur poisoning is commonly found in what area?
- Western U.S.
- Name some reasons for culling?
- Low production, Chronic health or injuries, Mastitis, reproduction, dairy purposes
- A disease that causes the body to be unable to fight diseases outside of the bloodstream.
- BLAD (bovine leukocyte adhesion deficiency)
- A sphincter muscle that controls the release of milk through the streak canal of each teat
- Furstenburg's rosette
- What is LH?
- Luetenizing Hormone
- CMT stands for?
- California Mastitis Test
- What type of mastitis can actually be seen in the milk?
- Clinical mastitis
- What type of mastitis cannot be seen in the milk and needs to be sent to the lab?
- Subclinical Mastitis
- What type of barn is good for milking a small herd in easy time period and has the disadvantage of medical back issues for milkers because the person doing the milking is at same level as the cow?
- Flat Barn
- What type of cattle housing can let in or out one cow at a time, the milker no longer has to stoop down because the cows are milked up high?
- Side-open
- What type of cattle housing has cows milked up high, come in as a group and leave as a group, and one person can milk more cows per hour?
- Herringbone
- What is the breeding weight for Holstein and Brown Swiss?
- 750lbs
- What is the breeding weight for Ayrshires?
- 600lbs
- What is the breeding weight for Guernseys?
- 550lbs
- What is the breeding weight for Jerseys?
- 500lbs
- What is the breeding age for heifers?
- 13-15 months
- What is a springer?
- Female bovine that is filling w/ milk & ready to calf
- What does IgG stand for and what is it?
-
Immunoglobulin
Antibodies passed from mom to baby - What is colostrum and when should it be given?
- moms milk that has antibodies, should be given w/in 30 minutes of birth
- A Sheep disorder related to abnormal transformation of cartilage into bone.
- Spider Syndrome
- Meat from young goats is called?
- Cabrito
- _____ is grass?
- Forage
- What is the disbudding age for kids?
- 3-14 days of age
- A goat is in estrus for how long?
- 1-2 days
- The stocking rate for goats? (buck/doe ratio)
- 1:30
- Mad Cow Disease is thought to be caused by what?
- Scrapie prion
- ________ is wool removed from sheep prior to scouring.
- Grease wool
- Undersirable large, chalky white hairs from Anogora goats.
- Kemp
- What is the composition of milk?
-
87.5% water
3.2% protein
7% Minerals - Measurement of the fineness of wool; 560 yards of yarn.
- Hank
- Meat from a mature sheep.
- Mutton
- Same as green chop
- soilage
- Young sheep under 1 year of age.
- Lamb
- Feedstuff of greater than 20 percent crude fiber and less than 60 percent in total digestible nutrients.
- Roughage
- Condition in which the two alleles at a given locus are not the same.
- Heterozygous
- Pertaining to the condition in which both genes at a particular location, on homlogous chromosomes, are the same allele or are identical.
- homozygous
- Genetic makeup of an animal
- Genotype
- Who are seasonal breeders?
- goats, sheep and horses
- Contagious Ecthyma in humans is called?
- Orf
- FSH is?
- follicle stimulating hormone
- What hormone induces lactation?
- lactogenic hormone
- Estimate of a sire's or dam's potential to transmit yield productivity to its offspring.
- Predicted transmitting ability (PTA)
- Another name for brucellosis is?
- Bang's Disease
- What breed has wattles?
- Toggenburgs
- ________ is another term used to indicate SCC levels or mastitis severity.
- Linear Score
- Primary mastitis-causing organisms are _________ and __________.
-
Streptococcus agalactiae
Staphylococcus aureus - E-coli as a mastitis causing organism is also _________ mastitis.
- Environmental
- The rubber part of the milking machine in actual contact with the cow's teat.
- Liner
- The cylindrical metal part of the teat cup.
- Shell
- Made up of the shell, inflation and air hose.
- Teat cup assembly
- A refrigerated storage tank for on-the-farm storage milk.
- Bulk tank (milk tank)
- Caused by poisoning from ingesting plants; animal walks with an unsteady gait.
- Blind Staggers
- Caused by prolonged ingestion of forage or grains; selenium poisoning
- Alkali Disease
- Coagulates milk in the stomach
- Renin
- A young bull
- Bullock
- Sage, shinoak and saltbush are examples of _______.
- Forbs
- ______ are well adapted for high altitude mountain grazing and are moderate milk producers.
- Oberhasli goats
- ______ are similiar to Saanen with the exception of color.
- Sable goats
- ______ are large, rugged animals with alert eyes and erect ears.
- French Alpine
- Oberhasli used to be called ________.
- Swiss Alpine
- Male goats have ________ around the horn base, if not burned off when young will spray on females and taste it in the milk.
- scent glands
- Lice are also know as?
- Pediculosis
- ______ leads the nation in dairy goats.
- CA
- _____ leads the nation in meat goats.
- TX
- Abortion, mastitis, high temperature, jaundice, wine colored urine, and anemia are conditions that occur with __________.
- leptospirosis
- A disease that causes the destruction of red blood cells that causes anemia and death.
- Anaplasmosis
- Signs of _______ are inflamed muscles, severe toxemia and death rate approaching 100%.
- Blackleg