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North Dakota: statute: North Dakota Century Code, Ch. 40-30 Ohio: court decision: Schmitmeyer vs. Ohio Department of Agriculture, Case No 06-CV-63277 Utah: statute: Utah Code, Title 4, Ch. 3 Utah Dairy Act Tennessee: statute: Tennessee State Code, 53-3-119 Use of milk from hoofed mammal for owner's personal consumption or use. Wyoming: regulation
The Livestock Mandatory Reporting Act of 1999 (Title IX of the FY2000 USDA appropriations act (P.L. 106-78)) requires large packers and importers to report to USDA the details of all transactions involving purchases of livestock and imported boxed lamb cuts, and the details of all transactions involving domestic and export sales of boxed beef cuts, sales of domestic and imported boxed lamb ...
North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame. [73] On December 14, 2009, the ABBI registry reached the 100,000th entry in its DNA database. Cody Lambert, livestock director for the PBR, noted that: There are more good bulls out there than ever before and the ABBI is one of the main reasons for that.
[2]: 143 A breed society, the Buelingo Beef Cattle Society, was started in 1989, and a herd-book was begun in the same year. [1]: 68 In 2012, new registrations of calves in the herd-book were 308; just over 8000 animals had been registered since the book was started. [2]: 143
The year’s North Dakota outbreak is the worst since 2005. From 2006 through last year, 18 cases of cattle anthrax were confirmed. Outbreaks in the U.S. are rare, as a vaccine for livestock is ...
North Dakota's oldest agriculture show, the show was founded under the guidance of Valley City businessman Herman Stern, who had previously been instrumental in the founding of the Greater North Dakota Association in 1924-25, and was serving as president of that group in 1937 when the state was facing adverse economic and agricultural ...
The incident happened around 1 a.m. Monday, the North Dakota State Highway Patrol said in a news release, when a large amount of cattle left a pasture next to Interstate 94, exit 190, near Driscoll.
The Nokota horse is a feral and semi-feral horse breed located in the badlands of southwestern North Dakota in the United States. The breed developed in the 19th century from foundation bloodstock consisting of ranch-bred horses produced from the horses of local Native Americans mixed with Spanish horses, Thoroughbreds, harness horses and related breeds.