Modern science has made some tremendous breakthroughs in the last century. Diseases that used to plague livestock have now been brought under control or eradicated completely. Only two infectious diseases can be considered completely eradicated: smallpox in humans in 1980, and rinderpest in ruminants in 2011. When a disease occurs in a geographic region, animal health officials have three choices for response: eradication, elimination, or endemicity.
A Bit of Mouse Brain, a Smidgen of Hamster Kidney, and a Rabies Virus
Why Do I Give Goats Sheep Vaccines?
Equine Hoof Care, Part 1
A Tiny Miracle Can Prevent a Big Disaster
Life in the ICP
Introduction to ICS
When Fate Flexes Her Alkaloids, Goats Die and Witches Fly
Leptospirosis: A Continued Threat
What Johnsongrass, Frankenstein, and Nazis Have in Common
AFB: A Threat to All of American Agriculture
Don't Bloat Your Goat
Virulent Newcastle Disease
No, You Can’t Feed Goats Everything!
West Nile Virus: From Introduction to Endemnicity
Is African Swine Fever Headed Your Way?
Why Goats Always Carry the Kings-Hood and a Bible – The Goat Digestive Anatomy
Here's Looking at You Kid, and All the Other Goat Terms
Why We Love Goats!
Maggots Among Us, Part 2
Maggots Among Us, Part 1
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