1st Edition

Biology of Domestic Animals

Edited By Colin G. Scanes, Rodney A. Hill Copyright 2018
    370 Pages
    by CRC Press

    370 Pages 9 Color & 48 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    370 Pages 9 Color & 48 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    There is increasing interest in the biology of domestic animals ranging from genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics, nutritional physiology, and systems biology. This book touches on all of these, with a particular focus on topics such as domestic animals as comparative models to humans, molecular regulation of growth, metabolic efficiency, reproduction, and the impact of stress on growth and development. The book concludes with a discussion on the current and future directions for researchers.

    Domestic Animals as Comparative Models to Humans. Equine Exercise Physiology: A Historical Perspective. The Pig Model for the Study of Obesity and Associated Metabolic Diseases. Growth Hormone and the Chick Eye. Porosome Enables the Establishment of Fusion Pore at its Base and the Consequent Kiss-and-Run Mechanism of Secretion from Cells. Molecular Regulation of Growth / Metabolic Efficiency. Epigenetics and Developmental Programming in Ruminants – Long-Term Impacts on Growth and Development. Molecular Physiology of Feed Efficiency in Beef Cattle. Hormonal Control of Energy Substrate Utilization and Energy Metabolism in Domestic Animals. Reproduction. Reproduction in Poultry: An Overview. Animal Stress and Welfare. Stress in Livestock Animals: From Domestication to Factory Production. Biology of Stress in Livestock and Poultry. Future Directions. Nutrient Transporter Gene Expression in Poultry, Livestock and Fish. Novel Peptides in Poultry: A Case Study of the Expanding Glucagon Peptide Superfamily in Chickens (Gallus gallus).

    Biography

    Colin G. Scanes, Rodney A. Hill