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  2. Feral goat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feral_goat

    The feral goat is the ... Nightshades and wilted fruit trees are also toxic to goats and any presence of Listeria bacteria can prove fatal to goats as they are ...

  3. Invasive species in Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invasive_species_in_Australia

    Feral goat (Capra hircus) 1840: Domestic livestock: Unknown: Throughout Australia (extensive) High: more than 2.6 million in 1996 [28] Feral pig : 1788: Domestic livestock: Europe: Throughout Australia, except in deserts (extensive) High: up to 23.5 million in 2011: Musters, ground and helicopter culling, trapping, poisoning, fencing

  4. Feral goats in Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feral_goats_in_Australia

    The bulk of them were feral rangeland goats, captured and gathered through goat depots, and then sent to an abattoir. [ 5 ] [ 13 ] As of the early 2020s, Australia was responsible for only 0.4% of worldwide goat meat production, and its domestic market was small; only 9% of locally produced goat meat was consumed there.

  5. Kri-kri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kri-kri

    As molecular analyses demonstrate, the kri-kri is not, as previously thought, a distinct subspecies of wild goat. Rather, it is a feral domestic goat, derived from the first stocks of goats domesticated in the Levant and other parts of the Eastern Mediterranean around 8000-7500 BCE. Therefore, it represents a nearly ten-thousand-year-old ...

  6. List of infectious sheep and goat diseases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_infectious_sheep...

    Sheep and goats are both small ruminants with cosmopolitan distributions due to their being kept historically and in modern times as grazers both individually and in herds in return for their production of milk, wool, and meat. [1] As such, the diseases of these animals are of great economic importance to humans.

  7. Goat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goat

    Goats produce about 2% of the world's total annual milk supply. [63] Dairy goats produce an average of 540 to 1,180 kg (1,200 to 2,600 lb) of milk during an average 284-day lactation. [64] The milk can contain between around 3.5% and 5% butterfat according to breed. [65] Goat milk is processed into products including cheese [66] and Dulce de ...

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  9. Caprine arthritis encephalitis virus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caprine_arthritis...

    Caprine arthritis encephalitis virus (CAEV) is a retrovirus which infects goats and cross-reacts immunologically with HIV, [1] due to being from the same family of viruses. [medical citation needed] CAEV cannot be transmitted to humans, including through the consumption of milk from an infected goat. [2] There is no evidence that CAEV can cure ...