Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Plants Poisonous to Livestock in the Western States
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Author
Author not available
Publisher
USDA Agricultural Research Service
Publication Year
2011
Body

Panter, K.E., M.H. Ralphs, J.A. Pfister, D.R. Gardner, B.L. Stegelmeier, S.T. Lee, K.D. Welch, B.T. Green, T.Z. Davis, and D. Cook. 2011. Plants Poisonous to Livestock in the Western States. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Bulletin No. 415.

Poisonous plants are a major cause of economic loss to the livestock industry. Each year these plants adversely affect 3 to 5 percent of the cattle, sheep, and horses that graze western ranges. These losses result from death of livestock, abortions, photosensitization, decreased production, emaciation, and birth defects. In addition to these losses are those of increased management costs associated with such things as fencing, altered grazing programs, and loss of forage. This bulletin describes more than 30 of the principal poisonous plants growing on western ranges and the signs of poisoning in livestock. Suggestions are included for the prevention of livestock poisoning by plants.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Technical Report
Collection
Keywords
abortion
Bitterweed
Bracken Fern
arrowgrass
Chokecherry
copperweed
death camas
Emaciation
false hellebore
greasewood
groundsel
Halogeton
hemp dogbane
horse-brush
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