This is the Salmon Research Trust Centre at Burrishoole, where scientists spend their days studying salmon and ranching them. |
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Mr Mubanga, now a businessman and politician does cattle ranching and mixed farming on his 200 hectare farm in Chief Chimese's area in Mansa. |
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In arid regions traditionally used for cattle ranching, farms could be a maximum of 2000 hectares. |
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Sixty percent of the nation's gold is mined here, and the county relies heavily on its natural resources for cattle ranching. |
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In the West, cattle and sheep ranching soon forged the strongest economic link between Scotland and the United States. |
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A large part of its economy is dependent on agriculture and cattle ranching. |
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The Epperson's way of pasture ranching horses allows the horses to learn herd behavior and grow up in nature's elements. |
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Indeed, ranching seemed to have invaded Chickasaw society as the eighteenth century ended. |
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He was the far-seeing pioneer who introduced cattle ranching and wheat farming to the American West. |
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His father's skin, once ruddy from a lifetime of Montana ranching, has gone waxen and slack. |
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Cattle ranching, however, has become more important to them and many Sioux derive some economic benefit from the cattle industry. |
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Alisal Guest Ranch wrangler and cowboy poet Jake Copass, 82, is a link to an earlier era of ranching in the area. |
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Both came from mainstream ranching traditions and initially recoiled at the new philosophy. |
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Texas is considered by many to be the birthplace of the American ranching industry. |
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I was hired by timber workers, mining and ranching interests to investigate acts of sabotage against their industries. |
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Overall, county agricultural land that was once in crops has increasingly shifted to pasture and cattle ranching. |
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If I hadn't been so good at the family business I would take up cattle ranching. |
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Because I love horses and cattle and ranching, I also helped outside all I could, and loved it. |
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Environmentalists want Lula to push for jobs in areas like sustainable forestry and tourism rather than cattle ranching and soy farming. |
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Causes of habitat destruction were many and synergistic, involving agricultural practices, cattle ranching, and urban growth. |
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As cattle ranching spread northward into California and Texas, Americans adopted the tools and techniques of the vaquero. |
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She makes a living applying animal psychology research to fields like cattle ranching. |
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Mato Grosso is also home to an unproductive kind of agriculture, which involves ranching small numbers of cattle on newly deforested land. |
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Droughts have always been part of farming and ranching in the hardest-hit areas of the Midwest. |
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Farming and ranching concerns will also have little political leverage with the White House. |
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Tasmania's economy, like the rest of Australia's, was originally based on sheep ranching, agriculture, and extractive industries like mining and logging. |
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This in turn has served to fuel hostility from those whose survival depends on lowland pastures and has affected cattle ranching and tourism in wildlife reserves. |
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This was an isolated but basically normal ranching town until 1971, when the sculptor Donald Judd moved here from New York. |
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Again, this is a very important provision, especially in the ranching and farming communities. |
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In view of the lack of effective ranching in Tanzania, the unlimited quota for ranched specimens should be opposed. |
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The riding of Macleod, from the south boundary of Calgary down almost to the U. S. border, has some of the finest ranching in this world. |
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Another common amendment is the addition of special conditions to a transfer proposal such as a ranching condition or a quota. |
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It is possible that ranching may one day provide a considerable number of the pelts that enter trade, as is now the case with mink and fox. |
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A 1997 study of endangered species in the southwestern United States by the Fish and Wildlife Service found that half the species studied were threatened by cattle ranching. |
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The ranching life to which Irene and her husband became accustomed, changed rapidly with the arrival of waves of immigrants and the railway. |
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Today, Palominos serve a wide range of purposes, from ranching and riding to racing and rodeos, and are valued for their all-around talent. |
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I grew up in a farming and ranching community in southern Alberta, where smokeless tobacco was not uncommon. |
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Audrey Read took her years of ranching and farming experience and turned it into a book any farmer can't help but belly laugh at. |
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Rhino ranching has clearly demonstrated how use of a natural resource can benefit both man and the resource itself, without succumbing to the predations of poachers. |
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To date all successful proposals for transfer from Appendix I to Appendix II for ranching under CITES have concerned crocodilians. |
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As a boy in alamo, a tiny Mormon ranching community in Lincoln County 90 miles north of Las Vegas, Lamb was one of 11 children. |
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Such intensification is probably feasible in the Amazon where low value extensive cattle ranching is rife. |
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In the case of stock farming and game ranching care can be taken not to overstock and nesting areas of ground nesting bees and wasps can be protected from trampling. |
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Throughout the nineteenth century, England was the largest investor in American land development, railroads, mining, cattle ranching, and heavy industry. |
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To facilitate recapture, sea ranching is commonly conducted with migratory stocks, such as salmon, that return to their natal streams to spawn. |
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In the past, threats to forests and their biodiversity have come mainly from agriculture in the Mata Atlantica and cattle ranching in the Amazon. |
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Several indicate that agricultural and ranching production systems are increasingly oriented towards trade in products with market advantages. |
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Over the long run, ranching and commerce were the most important economic activities, with the settlement of Tehuantepec becoming the hub. |
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A bottom-up analysis of local individual behaviours to assess the total economic benefits from deforestation, including timber harvesting, cattle ranching and agricultural activities. |
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To make matters worse, the federal cull cow and bull program was so badly developed that British Columbia and Alberta, two of the largest provinces when it comes to ranching, refused to join up. |
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The letter was from a fellow rancher who, instead of engaging in work in the oil field as I did to support my habit of ranching, became a lawyer so he could be a rancher. |
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The equipment will be used to facilitate research and development to help ranchers, producers and suppliers adopt new technologies that support sustainable ranching practices. |
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All of these findings are important to the ranching community of the Prairies, as native grasslands prairie provides a number of economic and ecologic benefits. |
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The remainder of the carbon dioxide emissions comes from human land use activities such as ranching, agriculture and the clearing and degradation of forests. |
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Cattle ranching, sheep grazing and cultivation have already destroyed much of this arid habitat and reduced the populations of species already limited in number. |
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The federal government also has responsibility for management of enhancement or sea ranching of public stocks, which may be supported by the use of aquaculture technology. |
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The crossbreeding of the BBB with the Zebu Nelore leads to a type of bovine presenting more muscle and less fat and bone, while observing the local conditions of ranching and environment. |
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Bush Willow. Rooibos occurs in most parts of the ranching areas of the northern, north-western and north-eastern Transvaal. |
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Historically the Basques abroad were often employed in shepherding and ranching and by maritime fisheries and merchants. |
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A variant method of fish stocking, called ocean ranching, is under development in Alaska. |
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In the US, profit tends to rank low among motivations for involvement in livestock ranching. |
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Estuaries are also commonly used as fishing grounds, and as places for fish farming or ranching. |
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Cattle ranching and foodstuff production proliferated after the population growth, both of which relied heavily on slave labor. |
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Similar ranching systems have been used for sheep, deer, ostrich, emu, llama and alpaca. |
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But confraternities also later pursued cattle ranching, as well as mule and horse breeding, depending on the local situation. |
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They continued to pursue agriculture, some of it irrigated, which was not disrupted by the growing ranching economy. |
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In contrast to the Zapotecs, the Zoque generally declined as a group during the ranching boom, with interloping animals eating their maize crops. |
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Of the three indigenous groups, the Huave were the most isolated from the Spanish ranching economy and labor demands. |
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Most mission land was subdivided and into large land grants used mainly for cattle ranching. |
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Formally the widow still ranches, but in fact she leaves all ranching to the foreman. |
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Factors influencing the ranching of the abalone species along the Namaqualand coast of South Africa. |
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The IRS had improperly disallowed the ranching losses as passive activity losses, and the trust was entitled to a refund or the overpaid taxes with interest. |
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Cattle ranching for meat, tallow, and leather were also important. |
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The desert and mountain states have relatively low population densities, and developed as ranching and mining areas which are only recently becoming urbanized. |
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