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Horsetalk.co.nz Covid restrictions a real struggle for some in horse community, but others did OK Pandemic-related obstacles affected the wellbeing of horse owners, equine veterinarians and those running boarding stables, the findings of fresh British research show. Issues with communication as the nation locked down to counter the threat of Covid-19 caused stress, as did the limitations to contact between horses and their owners. Those involved in the care of horses faced a variety of challenges to their own wellbeing whilst they navigated providing care to animals during the initial lockdown, Ashley Ward and her fellow researchers noted in the journal ....
The pandemic was a “preventable disaster”, says an international panel that reviewed the global COVID-19 response. It calls for immediate action to stop this pandemic, and investment to avert the next one. “COVID-19: Make it the . ....
Credit: Dr Lori Peacock Researchers at the University of Bristol have discovered how microbes responsible for human African sleeping sickness produce sex cells. In these single-celled parasites, known as trypanosomes, each reproductive cell splits off in turn from the parental germline cell, which is responsible for passing on genes. Conventional germline cells divide twice to produce all four sex cells - or gametes - simultaneously. In humans four sperms are produced from a single germline cell. So, these strange parasite cells are doing their own thing rather than sticking to the biology rulebook. Trypanosome cell biology has already revealed several curious features. They have two unique intracellular structures - the kinetoplast, a network of circular DNA and the glycosome, a membrane-enclosed organelle that contains the glycolytic enzymes. They don t follow the central dogma that DNA is faithfully transcribed into RNA, but will go back and edit some of the RNA tr ....
Veterinary researchers to receive top accolade at graduation Professor Craig Johnson and Professor John Munday are receiving the degree for their research. Two veterinary scientists will each be awarded a Doctor of Science, one of the highest academic accolades, at Massey University’s Manawatū graduation this week. Professor Craig Johnson and Professor John Munday are receiving the degree for their research into animal anaesthetics and animal cancer, respectively. They are among the more than 1000 students who will graduate across five ceremonies in Palmerston North this week. A total of 1072 graduates will cross the stage, including 40 receiving doctoral degrees and 119 receiving master’s degrees at ceremonies held at the Regent on Broadway in Palmerston North. Ceremonies begin on the afternoon of 3 May and continue twice daily until 5 May. ....