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of 43
pro vyhledávání: '"J. Holmes Martin"'
Autor:
J. Holmes Martin
Publikováno v:
The Biological Bulletin. 56:357-370
1. Single doses of desiccated thyroid ranging from 8 to 30 grams although producing physiological shock were not lethal to hens.2. Single doses of 30 to 35 grams proved lethal to two out of three capons.3. Cockerels are able to withstand single dosag
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content. 71:349-354
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Nutrition. 15:621-627
Autor:
Cliff D. Carpenter, J. Holmes Martin
Publikováno v:
Poultry Science. 18:168-174
MANY diseases have ceased to exact heavy toll from the poultry industry, as a result of the combined efforts of nutrition workers, pathologists, and parasitologists. Rickets, pullorum, fowl pox, and blackhead are but a few examples of diseases that h
Autor:
J. Holmes Martin, W. M. Insko
Publikováno v:
Poultry Science. 14:361-364
THE distribution of embryo mortality in turkey eggs is not reported in the literature. In the experiment reported herein it has been determined and compared with that of the fowl. Payne (1919) found that there were two critical periods during the inc
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content. 71:543-547
Autor:
W. M. Insko, J. Holmes Martin
Publikováno v:
Poultry Science. 14:152-155
THE same temperature that has given best results for chicken eggs is usually recommended for the incubation of turkey eggs. With the forced-draft type of incubator there is no necessity to move the thermometer, but in the sectional type it is usually
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content. 76:28-34
Publikováno v:
Poultry Science. 9:1-5
Investigations reported by the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station 1 have shown that for the normal growth of chicks that were fed a ration consisting of yellow corn, middlings, casein, salt and .5 per cent cod liver oil, approximately 2 percent of
Autor:
J. Holmes Martin, G. Davis Buckner
Publikováno v:
Poultry Science. 8:284-289
In another publication 2 the authors presented evidence to show that the calcium in rock phosphate, when fed to hens on a grain-bran-tankage ration, is not utilized in the formation of egg shell, at least, not to the same extent as calcium in the for