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1. Untitled Document
Problems (Pennsylvania coop. ext.) House Bat Management ( U.S. Fish and Wildlife service) coop. ext.) Controlling House Mice ( nebraska coop. ext.) Controlling Rats ( nebraska coop
http://www.berrymaninstitute.org/internetpubs.htm
On-Line Wildlife Damage Publications General Mammals

2. Kids' Science Page. 4-H Leaders' And Teachers' Guides - Animals - National Agric
Fox, BW PublVa-coop-ext-Serv. H. Blacksburg Virginia cooperative extension service,Virginia Tech Lees, Jenny., and nebraska cooperative extension service
http://www.nal.usda.gov/Kids/4han.htm
Learn About NAL
Kids' Science Page
National Agricultural Library
Explore Subjects...
Animals

Environment

General Science

Plants

Find Info On... 4-H Projects Basics of Scientific Research Beginning A Science Project Biographies of Scientists ... Videocassettes
Kid's Science Page
4-H Leader's and Teacher's Guides
Animals
The following program and curricula guides were developed by the USDA's Cooperative Extension Service to support youth education and programs. Also included are resources to assist program leaders develop new programs and/or evaluate existing programs. Animals
  • 4-H fish and wildlife : leader's guide.
    Colorado State University. Cooperative Extension Service.
    [Fort Collins, Colo.] : Colorado State University Cooperative Extension, [l991] 33 p. NAL Call No.: SH327.7.F67-1991 Descriptors: Fishery-conservation, Study and teaching, Wildlife-conservation, Study and teaching, 4-H-clubs, Colorado. 4-H livestock advancement project guide and record. [Blacksburg] : Virginia Cooperative Extension Service, Virginia Tech and Virginia State, 1990. 7 p. NAL Call No.: S544.3.V8V52-no.400-086
  • 3. FARMLAND SERVICE COOP, INC., GOTHENBURG, NE
    Farmland service coop, Inc. is a full service farmer owned coop. Main office located in Gothenburg, nebraska. Membership open to everyone. FARMLAND service coop INC. P.O. BOX 80. GOTHENBURG, nebraska 69138. PHONE (308) 5377141 Board of Directors. Gothenburg Phone ext 's. Fsc Locations/Staff
    http://www.farmlandservice.com/
    FARMLAND SERVICE COOP,INC
    P.O. BOX 80
    GOTHENBURG, NEBRASKA 69138
    PHONE: (308) 537-7141

    This Page Was Updated: June 10, 2004
    The membership of both cooperatives
    approved the merger. Delayed Grain Futures Here
    Gothenburg Elevator
    North Platte Radar
    Click Here for Stormwatch
    Weather Warnings Download Adobe Acrobat Reader HERE To View PDF Files Search Open Directory Arts Business Computers ... Ebooks

    4. Abbreviated Titles 1995 : N-O
    nebraska tractor test nebraska Agricultural Experiment northwest - cooperativeextension service, Oregon State O7 Ornamentals Northwest coop ext Serv Oreg
    http://www.nal.usda.gov/indexing/lji95/abrtik.htm
    Abbreviated Titles : N-O

    5. Agriculture World - Agri-Business / Real Estate
    University of Arkansas coop.ext. service. University of California coop. ext. service.University of nebraska. University of Wisconsin cooperative ext. service.
    http://www.agricultureworld.net/linksgeneral.htm
    AGRICULTURE WORLD
    LINKS TO GENERAL AGRICULUTRE INFORMATION
    Agricultural Organization Extension Services Ag Health Organizations Environmental Agencies ... Training Agricultural Health Organizations AgrAbility Agricultural Safety and Health Network Farm Safety and Health in Minnesota Clinicians Network ... University of Wisconsin Center for Agricultural Safety and Health Environmental American Crop Protection Association American Water Works Association EPA Integrated Risk Information System Farm*A*Syst and Home*A*Syst ... U.S. Trade Representative Food Safety American Meat Institute Fight Bac! Food Safety Food Safety - Gateway to Government Food Safety Information ... Wisconsin Division of Food Safety Injury Prevention Children's Safety Network Consumer Product Safety Commission National Institute for Farm Safety, Inc.

    6. UW Cooperative Extension Service
    Converse County, UW coop ext serviceThe Platte River Roundup Jackpot Source Brian Bosshamer, ext service Educator. nebraska cooperative extension serviceThe Seventh Annual nebraska
    http://www.fiberpipe.net/~sherfair/pdfs/anscinews-june-02.pdf

    7. Abbreviated Titles 1996 : E
    E Purdue Univ coop ext Serv* E Purdue University, cooperative extension service E.C. - Neb. coop. ext. Serv. EC - cooperative extension service, University of nebraska. NAL call no
    http://www.nal.usda.gov/indexing/lji96/abrtie.htm
    Abbreviated Titles : E
    E
    E - Purdue University, Cooperative Extension Service

    NAL call no. - SB844.I6P8
    E H P Environ Health Perspect*
    E.H.P. Environmental health perspectives

    NAL call no. - RA565.A1E54
    E Purdue Univ Coop Ext Serv*
    E - Purdue University, Cooperative Extension Service

    NAL call no. - SB844.I6P8
    E.C. - Neb. Coop. Ext. Serv.
    EC - Cooperative Extension Service, University of Nebraska
    NAL call no. - 275.29 N272EX EB Mont State Univ Ext Serv EB - Montana State University, Extension Service NAL call no. - S544.3.M9E23 EC EC NAL call no. - HD1775.I6E22 EC EC - University of Arkansas, Cooperative Extension Service NAL call no. - 275.29 AR4 EC Coop Ext Serv Univ Nebr* EC - Cooperative Extension Service, University of Nebraska NAL call no. - 275.29 N272EX EC Univ Arkansas Coop Ext Serv* EC - University of Arkansas, Cooperative Extension Service NAL call no. - 275.29 AR4 Ecol Mongr* Ecological monographs NAL call no. - 410 EC72 Ecol Publ Ecol Soc Am* Ecology : a publication of the Ecological Society of America NAL call no. - 410 EC7 Ecol Rev* Ecological review NAL call no. - 410 EC73

    8. Links And Resources
    Kansas State University Agric Exper Station and coop ext service http//www.oznet.ksu.edu/. Universityof nebraska cooperative extension http//extension.unl.edu
    http://lowcostcowcalf.com/links.htm
    Please Enter Your Email: Agri-Concepts, Inc.
    12850 N. Bandanna Way
    Tucson, AZ
    A lumni of the School Allan Nation
    http://www.stockmangrassfarmer.com Beef Booster
    http://www.beefbooster.com Charley Orchard (Land EKG, Inc)
    http://www.landekg.com Chuck Bowey (Ranch Resources, LLC)
    http://www.ranchresources.net Ervin’s Natural Beef
    http://www.ervins.com Homestead Healthy Foods
    http://www.homesteadhealthyfoods.com Jeff Hunewill
    http://www.hunewillranch.com Joe Morris http://www.morrisgrassfed.com http://www.Thunderinghooves.net John Chase http://sustainablesolutionsllc.com Karen’s Cimarron Ranch Natural Meats http://soarizona.net/greatbeef/index.html Kenneth King (Jako, Inc.) http://www.jakoinc.com Kirk Gadzia http://home.earthlink.net/~kgadzia Kit Pharo http://www.pharocattle.com Nathan Creswick http://www.CreswickFarms.com Noble Foundation http://www.noble.org/ag/ Pete Bussman http://www.buckeyeconservancy.org Peter Donovan http://managingwholes.com

    9. Abbreviated Titles 1995 : D-E
    Tales Univ Calif Berkeley coop ext Serv* Dairy tales University of I6E22 EC coop ext Serv Univ Nebr* EC - cooperative extension service, University of nebraska 275.29 N272EX
    http://www.nal.usda.gov/indexing/lji95/abrtie.htm
    Abbreviated Titles : D-E
    *Previously used abbreviated title

    10. Bacterial Ear Rot In Corn Due To Flooding (Purdue Univ.)
    2002. Bacterial Stalk Rot. Univ. of nebraska coop. ext. service. Available onlineat http//pdc.unl.edu/corn/bacterialstalkrot/. URL verified 7/18/03.
    http://www.agry.purdue.edu/ext/corn/news/articles.03/EarRot-0720.html
    If you would like to receive Corny News Network articles and other corny information by email, contact RL (Bob) Nielsen
    Other Corny News Network articles can be viewed at the CNN Archives Published 20 July 2003
    Photo Gallery:
    Bacterial Ear Rot in Corn Due to Flooding
    URL: http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.03/EarRot-0720.html R.L. (Bob) Nielsen
    Agronomy Dept., Purdue Univ.
    West Lafayette, IN 47907-2054
    Email address: rnielsen@purdue.edu
    he Great Flood of '03 will be remembered for the crop devastation caused by the flooding of the Wabash River and many of its tributaries. As the flood waters recede, the totality of crop death is immediately evident in those areas where crops were totally submerged for a period of days. Click on images for larger popup versions. Less obvious is the damage to plants on the higher elevations within the flood plain that were only partially submerged, particularly those fields where pollination was in progress or that were in the early grain filling period following pollination. These plants withstood the onslaught of flood waters that rose to heights above the ear but quickly receded with little to no major structural damage to the plants. Unfortunately, these survivors along the fringes of the major flooding may have won the battle, but may lose the war because of the potential for the development of bacterial ear rot as a consequence of the exposure of the immature ears to the muddy flood waters. The following images illustrate the occurrence of bacterial ear rot in a corn field along the Wabash River in Vermillion County, Indiana. The field was adjacent to one that was totally destroyed by flood waters, but which itself had been briefly immersed up to and just beyond the ear shoots.

    11. Bacterial Ear Rot In Corn Due To Flooding (Purdue Univ.)
    This is a publication of the Corny News Network, a collection of crop newsletter articles written by RLNielsen, Purdue Univ. Purdue Univ. coop. ext. service. Available online at http//www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.98/ p c9828.html Univ. of nebraska coop. ext. service. Available online at http//pdc.unl
    http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.03/EarRot-0720.html
    If you would like to receive Corny News Network articles and other corny information by email, contact RL (Bob) Nielsen
    Other Corny News Network articles can be viewed at the CNN Archives Published 20 July 2003
    Photo Gallery:
    Bacterial Ear Rot in Corn Due to Flooding
    URL: http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.03/EarRot-0720.html R.L. (Bob) Nielsen
    Agronomy Dept., Purdue Univ.
    West Lafayette, IN 47907-2054
    Email address: rnielsen@purdue.edu
    he Great Flood of '03 will be remembered for the crop devastation caused by the flooding of the Wabash River and many of its tributaries. As the flood waters recede, the totality of crop death is immediately evident in those areas where crops were totally submerged for a period of days. Click on images for larger popup versions. Less obvious is the damage to plants on the higher elevations within the flood plain that were only partially submerged, particularly those fields where pollination was in progress or that were in the early grain filling period following pollination. These plants withstood the onslaught of flood waters that rose to heights above the ear but quickly receded with little to no major structural damage to the plants. Unfortunately, these survivors along the fringes of the major flooding may have won the battle, but may lose the war because of the potential for the development of bacterial ear rot as a consequence of the exposure of the immature ears to the muddy flood waters. The following images illustrate the occurrence of bacterial ear rot in a corn field along the Wabash River in Vermillion County, Indiana. The field was adjacent to one that was totally destroyed by flood waters, but which itself had been briefly immersed up to and just beyond the ear shoots.

    12. Blackbirds
    and Control Methods nebraska cooperative extension service Nuisance Blackbirds inCrops (Missouri coop. ext.) Blackbirds — redwinged, grackles and cowbirds
    http://www.responsiblewildlifemanagement.org/blackbirds.htm
    " Blackbirds and starlings often establish roosts in areas where they are unwelcome because of the economic damage and potential health problems they cause." F. Robert Henderson Kansas State University, September 1992 Click on the Quick Fact Flash Card for Summary Detail and a Photo Brewer's Blackbird Common Raven Great-tailed Grackle Red-winged Blackbird ... Agriculture Western Australia The introduced blackbird ( Turdus merula ) is a pest in eastern Australia. It damages commercial fruit crops and may compete with native birds. The species is prohibited in Western Australia and individuals found here are destroyed. Blackbird Damage Prevention and Control Methods Nebraska Cooperative Extension Service. Note - This online resource is probably the most comprehensive blackbird report of those reviewed for listing in this links page. The file is in PDF format and can take a somewhat lengthy period of time to load. Blackbird Facts and Images Facts f rom the British Broadcasting Corporation "Wild Facts" database

    13. COMMUNICATION TOOLS AND RESOURCES: How To Develop Message Maps And Impact Statem
    North Carolina cooperative extension service University of nebraska cooperative extension Street,Suite 300 Denver, CO 802025202 jfrobose@coop.ext.colostate.edu.
    http://espnational.org/impact02.htm
    COMMUNICATION TOOLS AND RESOURCES:
    How to Develop Message Maps and Impact Statements
    (revised 9/3/2002)
    Effectively sharing our Extension Story is critical, but not easy. Whether presenting a brief impact report to elected officials or taping an interview with the local media, explaining Extension concisely and effectively can be a real challenge. To help Extension professionals prepare for both written and oral communications with key stakeholders, we offer the following resources. In addition to impact writing resources and examples of effective county, state and multistate impact reports, we have added information about a communication tool called a "message map." This tool can help Extension professionals develop brief, to-the-point impact messages that can easily be used in communicating with stakeholders. We encourage you to keep impact reports brief, but to tell specific ways your programs make a difference in people's lives. In developing a message map, you will be able to focus on the many positive ways Extension impacts people and to combine them in a way that is easily understood. Using a message map will help you control most communication situations by providing your key messages at a glance and a systematic way to access them quickly. MESSAGE MAPS Developing a message map . A message map is a visual communication tool developed by Tripp Frohlichstein , a St. Louis media consultant, and George Stenitzer to help individuals tell their organization's story more effectively to the media and other stakeholders.

    14. Prime And Unique Agricultural Lands And The National Environmental Policy Act (N
    Bldg. US Courthouse, Rm. 345 Lincoln, nebraska 68508. Dr. Gene McMurtryAssoc. Dir., coop. ext. service Stockbirdge Hall, Rm. 2ll
    http://ceq.eh.doe.gov/nepa/regs/exec81180.html
    EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
    COUNCIL ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
    722 JACKSON PLACE, N.W.
    WASHINGTON, DC 20006 August 11, 1980 MEMORANDUM FOR HEADS OF AGENCIES SUBJECT: Prime and Unique Agricultural Lands and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) The accompanying memorandum on Analysis of Impacts on Prime or Unique Agricultural Lands in Implementing the National Environmental Policy Act was developed in cooperation with the Department of Agriculture. It updates and supersedes the Council's previous memorandum on this subject of August 1976. In order to review agency progress or problems in implementing this memorandum the Council will request periodic reports from federal agencies as part of our ongoing oversight of agency implementation of NEPA and the Council's regulations. At this time we would appreciate receiving from your agency by November 1, 1980, the following information:
    • identification and brief summary of existing or proposed agency policies, regulations and other directives specifically intended to preserve or mitigate the effects of agency actions on prime or unique agricultural lands, including criteria or methodology used in assessing these impacts.
      identification of specific impact statements and, to the extent possible, other documents prepared from October 1, 1979 to October 1, 1980 covering actions deemed likely to have significant direct or indirect effects on prime or unique agricultural lands.

    15. Comparison Of Cercospora And Bacterial Leaf Spots On Sugarbeet
    nebraska coop. ext. NDSU extension service, North Dakota State University of Agricultureand Applied Science, and US Department of Agriculture cooperating.
    http://www.ext.nodak.edu/extpubs/plantsci/rowcrops/pp1244w.htm
    NDSU Extension Service
    North Dakota State University
    Comparison of Cercospora and Bacterial Leaf Spots on Sugarbeet
    PP-1244, April 2003 Carol E. Windels, Plant Pathologist, University of Minnesota, Northwest Research and Outreach Center
    Carl A. Bradley, Extension Plant Pathologist, North Dakota State University
    Mohamed F. R. Khan, Extension Sugarbeet Specialist, North Dakota State University/University of Minnesota
    Cercospora Leaf Spot (Cercospora beticola)
    Economic damage: Commonly occurs, can result in considerable loss in yield and quality and reduces storability of sugarbeet roots in piles. Cercospora leaf spots are circular, about 1/8 to 3/16 inch in diameter, with light to dark tan centers and dark-brown to reddish-purple borders. Elliptical lesions may occur on leaf blades, veins, and petioles. (Click here to link to a 27KB color photo of cercospora leaf spots.)
    Stromata (black dots about the size of pepper grains) form during humid weather in leaf spots on sugarbeet debris or newly infected leaves; they are easily seen with a hand lens. (Click here to link to a 38KB color photo of stromata.)

    16. Buffalograss Management Research: The Results May Surprise You | United States G
    coop. ext., University of nebraska, Lincoln, NE. EC921245-C. 3. Harivandi, A.,and L. Wu. 1995. coop. ext. service, Kansas State Univ., Manhattan, KS.
    http://www.usga.org/turf/green_section_record/2002/july_aug/buffalograss.asp
    Buffalograss Management Research: The Results May Surprise You
    The surprising response of this native species to management inputs.
    By Kevin W. Frank
    Buffalograss [Buchloe dactyloides (Nutt.) Engelm.] is a warm-season grass native to the Great Plains region of the United States. The only turfgrass species native to North America, it has long been claimed to be a low-maintenance grass with reduced irrigation, nitrogen, and mowing requirements.
    The Need for Research
    In response to a 1984 USGA call for proposals to develop reduced-maintenance turfgrasses, a team of scientists from the University of Nebraska led by Drs. Edward Kinbacher, Terrance Riordan, and Robert Shearman began evaluating buffalograss for use as a turfgrass. Interest in water conservation and reducing chemical inputs for turfgrass culture made buffalograss a desirable choice. USGA-sponsored breeding efforts to improve buffalograss for use as a turfgrass have been very successful and have resulted in the release of eight buffalograss cultivars.
    As the new buffalograss cultivars entered the market, it became evident that there was a need for research to investigate fundamental management practices. After all, this was not the same buffalograss that had been growing on the Great Plains for many thousands of years, but rather this was buffalograss that had been selected for favorable turfgrass traits such as color, density, uniformity, and vigor of spread.

    17. I-une.com: Education > Cooperative Extension
    University of nebraska cooperative extension Offers researchbased of Alaska Fairbankscooperative extension service State outreach www.uaf.edu/coop-ext/. Books.
    http://dir.i-une.com/Science/Agriculture/Education/Cooperative_Extension/
    Simultaneous search in the best search engines
    Cooperative Extension
    Science Agriculture Education Cooperative Extension Go to Web Directory Home
    Categories Sponsored Links
    Site Listings
    USDA Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service

    Aims to improve economic, environmental, and social conditions in the United States and globally.
    www.reeusda.gov/ Iowa State University Extension to Agriculture and Natural Resources
    Includes information on field specialists, farm business management,gardens, food safety, water quality, value-added agriculture.
    www.extension.iastate.edu/ag/ University of California Cooperative Extension
    Offers educatonal programs throughout California in the areas of farm management, 4-H, nutrition, and family and consumer sciences.
    ucanr.org/CES.CEA.shtml Penn State Cooperative Extension and Outreach
    Extension and outreach programs for producers, agricultural businesses and consumers in Pennsylvania and northeast U.S. www.extension.psu.edu/

    18. NAQ, No. 39: Cover Crops At A Glance
    Gooding, TH, 1951. Hairy Vetch for nebraska. U. nebraska Exper. Sta., CircularNo. 89. Davis, CA, No. 497. U. Mass. coop. ext. service, 1971.
    http://www.fuzzylu.com/greencenter/q39/cover1.htm
    Web Site Index
    New Alchemy Quarterly, No. 39
    Cover Crops at a Glance
    compiled by Mark Schonbeck and Ralph DeGregorio
    Cover crops are grown not to produce food or fiber, but to conserve, maintain and enrich the soil, and to perform other functions in the agricultural ecosystem. Growing cover crops during seasons in which the land would otherwise be idle protects the soil from water and wind erosion, reduces the loss of nutrients through leaching and runoff, adds organic matter and suppresses weeds. Legumes such as clover support symbiotic bacteria on their roots which fix (convert) atmospheric nitrogen into a form that plants can use. Many cover crops can extract nutrients from insoluble minerals, making them available for plant growth. When cover crops are turned back into the soil (at which time they are often called "green manures"), their residues contribute to soil organic matter, and a substantial part of their nutrients become available to the next crop. Finally, some cover crops provide food (nectar) or habitat for beneficial insects. Because so many benefits can be derived from a relatively small input of materials (10 to 100 lb seeds per acre), cover crops have been called a cornerstone of many sustainable agricultural systems (Liebhardt et al. 1989) At the New Alchemy Institute, we have been studying cover crops for sustainable vegetable production for the past three years. The table on the following page is a synopsis of information on cover crops for temperate climates, derived from a review of literature and seed catalogues, a survey of farmers in the Northeast (Schonbeck 1988), and our own experience.

    19. Human Ecology : Centennial National Satellite Videoconference
    7608 email jjustice@coop.ext.colostate.edu. of Minnesota extension service, SwiftCounty University of nebraska cooperative extension, Oshkosh Contact Carla
    http://www.humec.cornell.edu/centennial/satellite-sites.cfm
    HE Departments DEA DNS HD PAM TXA Home Centennial Centennial National Satellite Videoconference "Value Our Past, Create Our Future" See Also... Registered Satellite Locations as of 2/1/01 States
    Arkansas
    Colorado Florida Georgia ... Wyoming Arkansas
    Harding University, Searcy
    Contact: Dr. Beth Wilson, Ph: (501) 279-4472
    e-mail: bwilson@harding.edu Mid-South Community College, West Memphis
    e-mail: ggilliam@mscc.cc.ar.us
    University of Arkansas, Little Rock
    Contact: Dr. Steve Dennis, Ph: (501) 671-2202
    e-mail: sdennis@uaex.edu Colorado
    Colorado State University Cooperative Extension, Cortez
    Contact: Jan Sennhemn, Ph: (970) 565-3123 e-mail: montezum@coop.ext.colostate.edu Colorado State University Cooperative Extension, Rocky Ford Contact: Jean E. Justice, Ph: (719) 254-7608 e-mail: jjustice@coop.ext.colostate.edu Colorado State University Cooperative Extension, Tri River Area Contact: Rebecca Zamora-Van Sice, Ph: (970) 244-1834 e-mail: rzamora@co.mesa.co.us

    20. Agronomy Journal -- Elmore Et Al. 93 (2): 408
    nebraska coop. ext. EC 99104-A. Univ. of nebraska, Lincoln. Nielsen, RL 2000. 53.Iowa State Univ. coop. ext. service, Ames, IA. Singh, NB, and JW Lambert.
    http://agron.scijournals.org/cgi/content/full/93/2/408
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    Download to Citation Manager
    Collections under which this article appears: Weed Management Crop Genetics Soybean Production Agriculture Agronomy Journal American Society of Agronomy
    PRODUCTION PAPER
    Glyphosate-Resistant Soybean Cultivar Yields Compared with Sister Lines
    Roger W. Elmore a Fred W. Roeth a Lenis A. Nelson b Charles A. Shapiro d Robert N. Klein c Stevan Z. Knezevic d and Alex Martin b a Univ. of Nebraska, South Central Res. and Ext. Center, Clay Center, NE 68933 b Dep. of Agronomy, Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE 68583 c Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln, West Central Res. and Ext. Center, North Platte, NE 69101

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