Monitoring and practical support for the implementation of the program and experimentations. Support mission to the R and D program for a transfer and adaptation to the Northern regions of Ghana of Direct Seeding Mulch based Cropping systems [PDF]
Boulakia, Stéphane
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Highlights 1999/2000. Projet : fronts pionniers sud-Amazonie. Projet : semis direct cotonnier [PDF]
Bouzinac, Serge +2 more
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Options agroécologiques de gestion de la punaise Moissonia importunitas, ravageur important de la crotalaire à La Réunion [PDF]
Chabanne, André +6 more
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Monocrotaline-induced pulmonary arterial hypertension: the benefic effects of magnesium sulfate, Rosuvastatin and Sildenafil. [PDF]
Hojda SE +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
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Crotalaria spectabilis poisoning in horses fed contaminating oats
Toxicon, 2021The present report describes the clinical and pathological changes induced by the consumption of oats contaminated with Crotalaria spectabilis seeds by horses. Eighty horses were exposed to oats containing 10 g/kg of C. spectabilis seeds with 0.46% pyrrolizidine alkaloids, and 21 horses died within a 6-month period.
Maira dos Santos Carneiro Lacerda +8 more
openaire +2 more sources
Crotalaria spectabilis Poisoning in Swine
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1974SUMMARY When a ration containing corn contaminated by Crotalaria spectabilis seeds was fed to a herd of swine, 76 of 150 pigs died. Deaths first occurred 6 weeks after initial consumption of the ration and 3 weeks after the loss of black hair, the 1st clinical sign observed.
J C, Peckham, L T, Sangster, O H, Jones
openaire +2 more sources
Crotalaria spectabilis Toxicity Studies in Turkeys
Avian Diseases, 1963A number of reports have concerned the toxicity of Crotalaria spectabilis in various animal species. The toxic factor has been isolated, its molecular configuration established, and has been identified as monocrotaline (11). This alkaloid or the seed of C. spectabilis will produce pulmonary and intrahepatic hemorrhage and liver necrosis in rats (10,12),
openaire +2 more sources
Clinical Signs and Pathologic Changes in Crotalaria spectabilis-lntoxicated Rats
American Journal of Veterinary Research, 1970SUMMARY Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a ration containing Crotalaria spectabilis seed for 8 months. The concentration of this seed in the ration was varied from 0.02 to 0.08%. Initially, the lowest concentration was used; changes were made by a 0.02% increment every 45 days for the first 6 months, and the highest concentration (0.08%) was maintained ...
J R, Allen, L A, Carstens
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