Do not
use in animals known to be hypersensitive to the product.
DRAXXIN and DRAXXIN 25 should not be
used in animals known to be hypersensitive to the product.
Not exact matches
«
Knowing that no
animals were involved
in the creation of a product might make people feel better about
using it.»
Even
in the bible with talks of how the early church was to worship, it basically just says that whatever method with which you feel comfortable worshiping,
use it to glorify the Lord (within reason, clearly
animal sacrifices, etc were
no longer accepted practices).
It is difficult to
know where
in the
animal kingdom one has the need to postulate «self - consciousness,» «self - awareness» or, to
use Eccles» phrase, «the experiencing self.»
In the world of «monoculture» farming, the farmer relinquishes his expertise in land use and animal husbandry — such skills and virtues are no longer require
In the world of «monoculture» farming, the farmer relinquishes his expertise
in land use and animal husbandry — such skills and virtues are no longer require
in land
use and
animal husbandry — such skills and virtues are
no longer required.
Anyone familiar with Old Testament Hebrew would
know that the word translated «and»
in this pa.s.sage does not indicate another
animal but is
used in the sense of «even» (which is
used in many translations) for emphasis.
Most vegans have that one thing they
used to love
in their
animal based diets, even though they
know in their soul it's just wrong and gross.
We don't
know about you but we'd rather support farmers who let their
animals free range, encourage biodiversity, don't
use harsh chemicals and GM and take pride
in providing us with food the way it's meant to be — without traces of pesticides, hormones and antibiotics.
Meanwhile, when
used for juicing, around a third of an apple's biomass —
known as apple pomace or pulp — remains after the production process finishes, but is currently discarded or
used in low - value
animal feed or compost.
Looks like Stan likes to kill
animals ah wat money does to people they just get bored and cum up with stupid tv prog go kill
animals makes me mad and sad and to think our club is ran by this man
no wonder we are we're we are besides putting cash into tv, Stan get ur cash and give ozil and Sanchez and ox the money they want if doesn't do it go get bale that's wat real owner does and if Sanchez refuses da offer get the guys killing
animals on ur programme to go hunting Sanchez sick being put down like how are spurs ahead of us there building now we're passed that we should be
in champions league semis at least I don't
no if it's wenger or da owner but at Highbury when mr drink was around we had 13 world class players and Highbury now emirates we have maybe 3 or 4 or 5 tops, world class players and guess wat we can't even keep them oh my dear friends it don't feel rite I find myself losing my arsenal my life I can not believe spurs are above us and how we
use tear them to shreds our kids
use ta, who cares if Sanchez goes we will not win da league with Stan there he just wants pump cash
in to shooting poor
animals well to me ur the
animal and ur taking a sleeping giant
in to the jungle?
I'm pretty sure they'd do some of the things we do if they ruled the world it's natural you dumb monkey bitch... I'll tell you what since you think
animals are better why don't you stop
using technology of any sort tv, car, phone, computer, please oh please traffic lights run around
in the wild don't even eat human prepared food just go out and eat leaves and shit off the trees go to the jungle I guarantee you these
animals would kill you at some point then at least at the end of the day you would
know you did the world a favor....
In speech development, typical 18 - month - olds can:
Use 10 - 15 words spontaneously Attempt to sing Say «
No» meaningfully Gesture to express needs Name one or two familiar objects In speech development, most two - year - olds can: Understand «no» Use 10 to 20 words, including names Combine two words such as «daddy bye - bye» Wave good - bye and plays pat - a-cake Make the «sounds» of familiar animals Give.
No» meaningfully Gesture to express needs Name one or two familiar objects
In speech development, most two - year - olds can: Understand «
no» Use 10 to 20 words, including names Combine two words such as «daddy bye - bye» Wave good - bye and plays pat - a-cake Make the «sounds» of familiar animals Give.
no»
Use 10 to 20 words, including names Combine two words such as «daddy bye - bye» Wave good - bye and plays pat - a-cake Make the «sounds» of familiar
animals Give...
I am unsure why you disagree with
using data / results from studying other
animals that are
known to be similar to humans — I see studies all the time that correlate results
in other species (eg, to demonstrate the carcinogenic properties of something, they give it to rats and watch for tumors).
Congressman Chris Collins stands with actress Edie Falco,
known for her role as a mafia wife
in the television series «The Sopranos,» who is campaigning to ban the
use of
animals in military medical field trauma training.
Volumize your lashes happily,
knowing this mascara was never
used in animal testing.
«Before this study, it was not
known if it is possible to produce sufficient numbers of these cells and successfully
use them to remuscularize damaged hearts
in a large
animal whose heart size and physiology is similar to that of the human heart,» said Dr. Charles Murry, UW professor of pathology and bioengineering, who led the research team that conducted the experiment.
Fascinated by the anatomy of horses and other
animals in motion since his teens, Horváth
knew that most four - legged mammals (except primates) walk
using a specific footfall sequence — left hind, left fore, right hind, right fore — for maximum stability.
«We
know that urate has neuroprotective properties
in animal models, and an unusual convergence of human studies suggested its possible
use as a disease - modifying strategy
in Parkinson's; so the positive results of this trial are very encouraging.»
Steve:
In theory, you could have a handheld device like a glucose meter that a diabetic might use and you just, you know, take a hair of some animal, put it in the device, and you get an instant read up based on the analysis of that little DNA section of what species you're looking at and, you know, take your caterpillar example that might sound like something that just a level - headed field biologist would be interested i
In theory, you could have a handheld device like a glucose meter that a diabetic might
use and you just, you
know, take a hair of some
animal, put it
in the device, and you get an instant read up based on the analysis of that little DNA section of what species you're looking at and, you know, take your caterpillar example that might sound like something that just a level - headed field biologist would be interested i
in the device, and you get an instant read up based on the analysis of that little DNA section of what species you're looking at and, you
know, take your caterpillar example that might sound like something that just a level - headed field biologist would be interested
inin.
He didn't claim to
know what the expressions were for — he thought they were probably «not of the least
use» — but he did suggest that they were innate and rooted
in our shared ancestry with other
animals.
Instead of mitochondria (the cellular engines that convert oxygen to energy, present
in all other
known animal cells), these creatures contain structures resembling hydrogenosomes, the organelles that anaerobic microbes
use to generate energy.
Using data sourced from existing studies and information collected together
in the Liverpool ENHanCEd Infectious Diseases (EID2) database, the researchers cross-referenced all
known cases of parasites and pathogens
in domestic
animals with the length of time they have been domesticated by man.
Because turtles have locked their ribs up into the iconic turtle shell, they can
no longer
use their ribs to breathe as
in most other
animals and instead have developed a unique abdominal muscle based system.
«We
know that other
animals use polarisation patterns
in the sky, and we have at least some idea how they do it: bees have specially - adapted photoreceptors
in their eyes, and birds, fish, amphibians and reptiles all have cone cell structures
in their eyes which may help them to detect polarisation,» says Dr Richard Holland of Queen's University Belfast, co-author of the study.
In researches using the more complex animals, it is known that certain nerve cells in the brain integrate information and make a decision when reaching a certain level, which likely occurs also in human
In researches
using the more complex
animals, it is
known that certain nerve cells
in the brain integrate information and make a decision when reaching a certain level, which likely occurs also in human
in the brain integrate information and make a decision when reaching a certain level, which likely occurs also
in human
in humans.
But, he added, «[t] he public deserves to
know why and how
animals are
used on its behalf
in scientific, medical and veterinary research
in the UK.»
Using the most comprehensive conservation data available for both marine and non-marine organisms, research led by Dr Thomas Webb, from the University's Department of
Animal and Plant Sciences, has shown that 20 to 25 per cent of the well -
known species living
in our seas are now threatened with extinction — the same figure as land living plants and
animals.
Knowing that rats» faces can tell another rat how they're feeling will of course lead to more questions about
using the rodents — or other
animals —
in biomedical research.
According to Wilson, monoclonal antibodies from (deliberately infected)
animals were routinely
used in the first half of the 20th century to try to treat diphtheria (an upper - respiratory illness that killed roughly 15,000 people annually
in the early 1920s until a vaccine was formulated against it
in 1924) and tetanus (a potentially fatal infection also
known as lockjaw, because one of the muscles it destroys is
in the jaw).
Another well -
known invention is a process called bioorthogonal chemical reactions, which can be
used to label proteins, sugars, and other molecules
in living cells and
animals without damaging the cells.
The rodents» crafty feat places them
in the ever - growing club of
known tool -
using animals such as chimps, bearded capuchin monkeys, New Caledonian crows, alligators and even some fish.
«I don't
know about such a technique, but surely if dogs lose contact with the ground and hence their balance, this would be very annoying to them,» says Angelo Gazzano, an ethologist at the University of Pisa
in Italy who has worked on the behavioral rehabilitation of beagles
used in animal research.
Furthermore, the motion of a bone
in the fishes» throat,
known as the hyoid, closely resembles that of other terrestrial
animals, especially newts, which
use true tongues to eat.
Even small children might be surprised to discover that their representatives
in Washington
no longer consider rats, mice, and birds
used in laboratory experiments to be
animals, or at least
animals worthy of protection.
«But simply observing tool
use in the wild doesn't necessarily mean that the
animal is cognitively sophisticated, as we don't
know how the behaviour developed.»
Animal - nutritionist John Goihl
knows Minnesota farmers who feed the remains of dead baby pigs to hogs
used for breeding
in attempts to ward off infections of a deadly virus
in offspring.
We don't
know the magnitude of this process, but given the large amount of antimicrobials
used in animals we have good reason to be concerned.
«These levels are
known to impact both the human experience
in national parks and have a range of repercussions for wildlife... so
animals use sounds for many essential life functions, such as predator avoidance, navigation, finding food, mate attraction and maintenance of social groups.
Orcas are
known to communicate amongst themselves
using an array of sounds, and the
animals have even demonstrated «dialects» — variations
in communication signals that are specific to certain groups of the
animals — the scientists reported
in a new study.
Scientists have long
known about the potential environmental effects stemming from the
use and disposal of products aimed at keeping people healthy and clean, but with roughly seven
in 10 Americans owning at least one pet,
animal medications and other care products are slowly beginning to move into the spotlight too.
About 5,000 years ago, humans
used crude stone tools to puncture a hole
in a cow's head, making it the earliest
known instance of skull surgery
in an
animal.
«
In some cases in history, we know that slow - moving animals like tortoises were used as a «preserved» or «canned» food,» said Dr. Blasc
In some cases
in history, we know that slow - moving animals like tortoises were used as a «preserved» or «canned» food,» said Dr. Blasc
in history, we
know that slow - moving
animals like tortoises were
used as a «preserved» or «canned» food,» said Dr. Blasco.
A: One of the biggest differences between human registries and
animal registries is the
use of experimental therapies or compounds
in animal studies that aren't
known to the wider scientific community.
While some
animals that forage
in groups are
known to emit calls to attract others towards food sources, the FMB is
used to repel, not attract, other bats.
Couple that with a condition
known to the plant community as «plant blindness» - the tendency for students to be more interested
in studying
animals than plants, and biology teachers» preference for
using animal systems to demonstrate biological concepts - and you have yourself a plant publicity crisis.
CRISPR / Cas systems are
known as promising «gene scissors»
in the genome editing of plants,
animals, and microorganisms by targeting specific regions
in their DNA - and perhaps they can even be
used to correct genetic defects.
«
Use of objects as hunting lures is very rare among
animals, being
known to date only
in captive capuchin monkeys, a few bird species and one insect,» the authors wrote.
The researchers
used a technique called RNA interference (RNAi) to screen a group of genes
known to be involved
in animal development,
in order to study the signaling mechanisms that regulate whether the
animal would produce a head or tail during regeneration.
Since nematodes are the only
known organisms to
use ascarosides, «we don't have to be afraid of interfering with similar biochemistry
in animals, plants or humans,» Schroeder said, as researchers seek to identify species - specific ascaroside molecules that may enable novel approaches to deter or disrupt the survival or reproduction of parasitic worms.