News Alexandra Harlander

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Dokumentenbestellung – Die Akademie Fresenius GmbH

www.akademie-fresenius.de
Alexandra Harlander is Veterinarian and Assistant Professor at the Department of Animal Biosciences (formerly Animal and Poultry Science) at the University of Guelph in Canada. Her research looks at the impact that husbandry can …

$500,000 gift to University of Guelph will hatch further poultry...

www.guelphmercury.com
University of Guelph animal and poultry science professor and researcher Alexandra Harlander has been given a poultry professorship with a substantial gift...

Burnbrae Farms gifts $500,000 to U of Guelph to establish a...

www.farms.com
· Dr. Alexandra Harlander will assume the Burnbrae Farms Professorship position. The professorship aims to support the country's egg farmers ...

37. Biochemie Tagung im Biozentrum - myPoint

www.i-med.ac.at
Im Bild v.l.: Basak Engin, Ankara, TUR; Alexandra Harlander, Gulph, Ontario, CND; Gilbert Reibneggger, Graz, AUT; Johanna Gostner, ...

BlackburnNews.com - New Professorship In Poultry Welfare At U of G

blackburnnews.com
Your Local News Network serving London, Windsor, Chatham, Sarnia and Midwestern Ontario

Made in Canada lab grown poultry

cdn.annexbusinessmedia.com
That's why University of Guelph welfare expert Alexandra Harlander partnered with Bill van Heyst of the School of Engineering on a project to ...

Less feather pecking with bitter spray

phys.org
· Rodenburg and German researcher Alexandra Harlander-Matauschek jointly studied the results of using the bitter substance quinine on the ...

University of Guelph : U of G Study Pinpoints Reasons for Egg ...m.marketscreener.com › latest › U...

m.marketscreener.com
Alexandra Harlander with the Campbell Centre for the Study of Animal Welfare, who co-authored the study with post-doctoral researcher ...Alexandra Harlander with the Campbell Centre for the Study of Animal Welfare, who co-authored the study with post-doctoral researcher Nienke van Staaveren. Feather pecking is destructive nipping at another hen's feathers and occurs in all forms of housing, from conventional cages, to free-run facilities, ...
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