Cattle ranchers were able to work it, though, after King Kamehameha III stopped exiling criminals. |
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The livestock industry argues that ranchers have a right to graze on any land near their water rights, even if they do not own the land. |
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He says Florida cattle ranchers were aided by recent severe winters and drought. |
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Within its boundaries live over a hundred human residents, many of whom are farmers or cattle ranchers. |
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After all, if they do well, farmers, ranchers and consumers will do well, right? |
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Both models empower ranchers, because they complement and augment the rancher's own storehouse of knowledge and experience. |
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Farmers and ranchers can even turn to the Internet for products and services. |
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What worries me is the lack of concern regarding this trend among farmers and ranchers. |
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The cattle farmers and ranchers appealed to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals. |
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A growing segment of people are concerned about food quality and want to keep local ranchers and farmers in business, Antonio argues. |
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This will permit breeding cattle that ranchers will know are more likely to produce consistently tender offspring. |
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Previously, ranchers and farmers were allowed to request that portions of their agricultural lease be put up for public auction. |
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Private armies have flourished with the support of cattle ranchers, large-scale farmers, and investors. |
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Certified-organic crop farmers, livestock producers, ranchers, and handlers all qualify. |
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Some ranchers believe the larger animals compete with cattle for rangeland and attract predators, but that's a matter of opinion. |
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Like other agriculturalists across the country, ranchers are usually land rich and cash poor. |
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Western heroes are often lawmen, ranchers, army officers, or a fast-draw gunfighter. |
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Franklin has surveyed ranchers using llamas to protect sheep, and found that llamas seem to be earning their keep. |
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Over the next hundred years the Wind River Valley attracted only a few hardy farmers, ranchers, and roughnecks. |
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The plan, claim supporters, will assist farmers and ranchers dealing with severe losses caused by last year's weather. |
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Small ranchers are being harassed by massively wealthy cattle barons, who desire no impediment to their insatiable desire for money. |
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Iodine is mostly used by ranchers, in miniscule amounts, to treat thrush on horse hooves. |
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It is unpalatable to livestock because of its bitter taste so ranchers consider it to be a noxious weed. |
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Patten, a tall, bony man with a balding dome of a forehead, makes his living loaning money to ranchers. |
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The exhausted cowboys, branders and ranchers mounted their horses and rode slowly home. |
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Outfitted with cowboy hats and boots, they stopped along the way to talk to ranchers, contractors, and other macho truck drivers. |
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Small ranchers in northern New Mexico pay to graze 1 to 25 cattle per ranch in this oasis all summer. |
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But I think it was worth it, such a wonderful experience, sitting around a big table with all these old ranchers and cowpunchers. |
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We lived in a time when jack rabbits were vermin and the ranchers wanted all of them killed and I sure helped them out a bunch. |
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The breed became so popular among Queensland ranchers that it came to be known as the Queensland heeler or Queensland blue heeler. |
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Indeed, nationwide, ranchers are allowed to drive into federally designated wilderness. |
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The vast majority of meat-eating people rely upon the ranchers, farmers, etc. to do the actual killing of the animals. |
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This destruction is accelerated by the activities of cattle ranchers who grow beef for export to fast food chains in the United States. |
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A disease that has buffaloed scientists, veterinarians, and bison ranchers is yielding some of its secrets. |
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This is branding of the same literal sort that ranchers practice when they burn their symbols on the hides of cattle. |
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That short list includes farmers, ranchers, professional outfitters and rural property owners. |
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Gamblers, ranchers and shepherds came to see us, but the Mexicans gave us the go-by. |
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Asked about other marketing opportunities, he says ranchers are buying his organic cottonseed for feed. |
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Modern farmers and ranchers have discovered the efficiency of using ATVs as utility vehicles for driving around their property. |
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In the future, the lab's work with hormones and genetics may help ranchers and breeders help their heifers even more. |
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The breed became so popular among Queensland ranchers that it came to be known as the Queensland heeler. |
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I learned later that these boreholes, which were dug by cattle ranchers and reached down 100 meters and more, had lowered the water table. |
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Some ranchers found that water became unusable after seismic testing alone. |
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Since 15 to 25 percent of male sheep in U.S. flocks don't mate, ranchers want to find a way to identify good breeding rams. |
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Like you, I struggle to fathom what this will mean for farmers, ranchers, and rural America. |
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As a cash crop, cattle encouraged ranchers to practise ruthless predator control, killing bears, bobcats and mountain lions. |
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Due to its low value for livestock forage, it is a concern to livestock producers and ranchers. |
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Farmers and ranchers also need to be aware of recent changes in federal tax code, said Barrett. |
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The coalition, made up of area ranchers and farmers, may file an appeal of the decision. |
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But consumer groups, allied with many U.S. ranchers and cattlemen, want the labeling to begin on schedule. |
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In addition to losing land to ranchers and farmers, pastoralists have seen their mobility drastically reduced by the expansion of national game parks. |
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In addition to breeding calves and colts, Glenn earns a living taking clients out for guided hunts and stalking the occasional problem cat for local ranchers. |
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The difference between federal assistance and marketing is a symptom of the income shortage farmers and ranchers are experiencing in this country today. |
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The kind of long term research done at Stavely is fundamental to helping ranchers manage their land resources, and that means, sustainability. |
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It puts farmers, ranchers and fur producers under the gun with the threat of being taken to court by a group of people that is pushing the issue. |
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Working with ranchers to establish grazing methods that protect sagebrush habitats is a priority for the conservation of Greater Sage-Grouse. |
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It has been shaped by two influxes from south of the border: first of ranchers and farmers, and then in the 1950s of oilmen from Texas. |
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And in their spare time, those cowpunchers, ranchers, and old rodeo riders will use their experiences as grist for cowboy poetry. |
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Not only that, but much of the land in this region of Wyoming is owned by ranchers who know the terrain like the back of their hand, and have become adept at spotting fossils. |
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Last year panhandle ranchers Phillip and Doris Smith suffered through the worst one-year drought in Texas history. |
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These programs and services help farmers and ranchers manage the risks inherent in agricultural production. |
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They used satellite data to monitor deforestation, gathere public data on land registration and survey cattle ranchers on their behavior. |
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Some ranchers dared to hope it was the beginning of the end of the drought. |
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The original Acadians and Cajuns were farmers, herders, and ranchers, but they also worked as carpenters, coopers, blacksmiths, fishermen, shipbuilders, trappers, and sealers. |
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In addition to sylvatic plague, a disease likely brought from Europe by ship rats, prairie dogs have suffered from aggressive poisoning campaigns by farmers and ranchers. |
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It would strip farmers and ranchers of a fundamental civil liberty, the right to own property. |
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This publication can help farmers and ranchers evaluate, plan and manage successful agritourism business opportunities. |
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He says financial support there would provide the most bang for the buck for B. C. ranchers. |
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Farmers and ranchers would not be afraid of the bill if they knew that they had some recourse to defend themselves against malicious prosecution. |
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Urge ranchers to fence off fragile wetlands and watercourses to exclude cattle or allow only limited access to shorelines. |
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And short it remained, as a succession of ranchers and farmers tried to scratch a living out of the red dirt. |
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Competition for viable land intensified among farmers, ranchers, squatters, loggers and the indigenous community. |
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The scientists are looking for sustainable grazing solutions to help ranchers effectively manage their land resources. |
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He suggests that program could be delayed and the money used for more direct financial aid to struggling ranchers. |
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If they don't, we'll take it back. The wolf has been a pain to some stockmen, but has hardly put ranchers out of business. |
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Last night, with my leader, I attended a meeting of some 250 ranchers who are absolutely devastated and who have nowhere to turn. |
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Stop them, bellow ranchers who fear the bison will infect their cattle with brucellosis, a nasty disease. |
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But here we are proud of our western heritage: the hardscrabble tradition of pioneers, depression era wheat farmers, and cattle ranchers. |
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During the 19th century, barbecues on these properties were legendary, with the beef cooking on a spit over a huge fire while ranchers and their ladies danced the night away. |
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Adopted by ranchers and frontiersmen in the United States, the sombrero was modified into the cowboy hat. |
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Some nomads were settled as farmers, ranchers, or fishermen. |
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Growers and ranchers start the day with frittatas, omelets, or chicken-fried steak and three eggs in this historic shack just off the Carneros Highway. |
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Like all ranchers, Ernst Ludwig complains that the price for beef has drooped to an all time low in Namibia. |
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Across the Midwest, corn and soybeans are burning up in the field, and ranchers are culling their herds. |
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He said the variety is ideal for ranchers who have little interest in growing grain but see it as necessary to feed their cattle. |
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Young ranchers are being told to go back to the oil patch and to work there in order to save their ranches. |
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They were villages of farmers and ranchers, which were burying his dead men of a peculiar form, excavating a smelting to land and with a few big slabs, in which also provisions were depositing couple. |
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At the Mazama Store, old-time ranchers and new age vegetarians rub shoulders. |
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Her parents were ranchers and owned an electrical contracting company. |
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The idea of a feedlot has been kicked around for more than 30 years by local ranchers and business people, but it took some hard knocks in the industry to get the job done. |
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Some ranchers give permission to folks to hunt coyotes. |
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To the new-moneyed suitcase ranchers who had moved in all around him — ex-California real-estate agents, fabulous doctors, and retired cola executives — the Harp looked a skanky run-down outfit. |
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Marc Ladouceur has taken over the family cattle ranch from his father, but as the summer draws to a close, things are getting rough for Canadian ranchers. |
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Whenever I meet with farmers and ranchers the complaint is the same. |
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While feed costs have risen, the price for the livestock has also improved and that may make it an attractive option for some cattle ranchers looking for alternatives to the struggles of the beef industry. |
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To get themselves off the hook, and cows back on it, the abattoirs vowed that in future they would deal only with ranchers who had registered their names and property details and promised not to deforest illegally. |
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The denuded forests across Brazil cannot be explained, for example, without reference to the onslaught of cattle ranchers producing beef for foreign markets, or to Northern passions for tropical fruit and coffee. |
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This teetotaler with his keen sense of dress and his overly polite manner distinguished himself from the freethinking uncouth ranchers and farmers of the brash new city. |
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Wealthy farmers and ranchers, mining companies, peasants, loggers, indigenous peoples, and conservation groups all want a piece of the action, and the more fire power they have the more likely they are to succeed. |
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The Arctic Cat Bearcat ATV will be marketed as a utility vehicle for farmers, ranchers and outdoorsmen. |
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When European colonists encountered the species, they were of two minds, heralding it as an icon of the expansive West and vilifying it as the ultimate varmint, the bloodthirsty bane of sheep and cattle ranchers. |
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The local constable is useless, neither trying to find the Colonel's killer nor protecting the sheepherders from the cattle ranchers. |
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We have to come up with those issues so that the ranchers and the cow calf producers in this country can feel confident that the next time this does happen, they will not be put into this pressure cooker. |
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In the wintertime, although it is very mild back home, I know ranchers, their wives and their children who get up during the night to check on the cattle to ensure everything is all right in the calving process. |
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By the end of the 19th century, he was one of the most well known and respected ranchers in western Canada with bronco-busting skills that are said to be legendary. |
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A lot of ranchers in my riding, and myself included, would say that it has been five months and there still is nothing but a lot of blah, blah, blah. |
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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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The eagle population first took a knock when America expanded west and trigger-happy ranchers confused the pescivorous scavenger with the golden eagle, a species that really does eat chicken and sheep. |
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And while crossbreeding isn't a new development, it's becoming more common among Texas ranchers as summers become drier and hotter. |
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Although it will eat any vegetation, seeds and grasses are preferred, which makes the viscacha a pest to ranchers, especially because the burrows are hazardous to both humans and livestock. |
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The bureau owns the cattle on base and Nathe ensures ranchers don't allow cattle to overgraze. |
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Started by a group of sheep ranchers, the label certifies that farmers will not shoot wolves, grizzly bears or mountain lions that prey upon their livestock. |
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Today, both Monticello and Eastland are populated by farmers and ranchers. |
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Now a highway and railway junction and a service centre for ranchers, farmers, lumbermen, and miners, the city is the principal administrative headquarters for East Kootenay district. |
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Cattle ranchers know the blight of the leafy spurge, a non-indigenous species which impacts two million hectares of valuable grazing land and whose sap is toxic to cattle. |
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As a result of the fires, ranchers in the area have an urgent need to replace 148 kilometres of rangeland fencing to protect cattle turned out to pasture. |
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Wildfires have the potential to damage standing and stored forage supplies, cause livestock mortality, increase production costs and decrease revenues for affected farmers and ranchers. |
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Farmers and ranchers are among the finest conservationists in the country. |
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His proposals would have decimated the EU livestock sector, not to the benefit of the developing world, but rather to the low-cost emerging economies and their large ranches and ranchers. |
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Hear about the colorful history of ranchers, settlers, and outlaws who inhabited and hid out in this unforgiving land as you're taken on a casual and informative 30 minute hike around the canyon's rim. |
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Mostly, the rule concerns large industries, with exemptions remaining and indeed expanding for farmers, ranchers and foresters, EPA officials have repeatedly stressed. |
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Members can bet their bottom dollar that most ranchers and farmers understand the fact that these animals must be looked after and cared for with a great deal of concern. |
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Other ranchers are just as adamant the horns be allowed to remain, either because they believe cattle need them for their own protection or to avoid the cost and effort of dehorning. |
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The advancing agricultural frontier at the west side of the reserve, pushed by small farmers and cattle ranchers, is already reducing the Reserve's forest area. |
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Throughout Chiapas, violent confrontations continue to erupt between peasants and Mayan Indians on one side and wealthy ranchers and landowners on the other. |
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The Agricultural Food and Rural Development Sector has been added to the Bilateral Framework Agreement to address the needs of Métis farmers and ranchers. |
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Preserving biodiversity in agricultural landscapes requires understanding, and working with, the incentives and constraints faced by farmers and ranchers. |
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During that period, a handful of ranchers gathered remnants of the existing herds to save the species from extinction. |
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In the United States, many ranchers are now using DNA testing to cull the residual cattle genetics from their bison herds. |
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In 1981 there were 36 known ranchers in North Dakota that had 52 Great Pyrenees and 2 working Komondor dogs. |
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He was near death when he arrived in Monterey, California, where some local ranchers nursed him back to health. |
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The area had been populated by ranchers, but Tijuana developed a new social economic structure. |
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Controversy raged, with environmentalists applauding the proposal and the ranchers who owned and worked the land fervently opposing it. |
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Oregon farmers and ranchers also produce cattle, sheep, dairy products, eggs and poultry. |
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The guidance is directed at clone producers, livestock breeders, and farmers and ranchers purchasing clones. |
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She was left lying on the road in the town of Anapu in Para, a state where loggers and ranchers have deforested huge sections of the world's largest rain forest. |
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Its cousin, the Mormon cricket, is also plaguing farmers and ranchers. |
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Not only are they going back often, they are quite loyal to their farm radio source with farmers and ranchers listening to less than two different radio stations. |
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Finally, a compromise was crafted which allowed the ranchers to lease their land and continue dairying while coexisting with tourists and park activities. |
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Reducing eutrophication should be a key concern when considering future policy, and a sustainable solution for everyone, including farmers and ranchers, seems feasible. |
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Jackson, and fifteen other investors, the firm set out to provide garments suitable for western farmers, ranchers, lumbermen, coal miners, and other workers. |
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As in other American states, many of the native inhabitants were soon forcibly removed from their lands by incoming American settlers such as miners, ranchers, and farmers. |
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Eventually 18,000 acres purchased by the NPS were leased back to ranchers. |
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Ranchers have to be careful not to put too many cattle on these ranges because overgrazing can lead to erosion. |
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Ranchers graze cattle and water buffalo on floodplain grasslands to produce meat and secondarily dairy products. |
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Ranchers must work more closely with meatpackers and distributors to make the operation more efficient. |
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Ranchers and farmers also killed pronghorn, erroneously believing the antelope would take away forage from sheep or cattle. |
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Ranchers and environmentalists are again coming together to fight a proposal to drill for oil and gas in southern Alberta, this time near the protected Whaleback region. |
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