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1. Effects of feeding fresh citrus pulp to Merino wethers on wool growth and animal performance

2. Genesis, design and methods of the Beef CRC Maternal Productivity Project

3. Divergent genotypes for fatness or residual feed intake in Angus cattle. 2. Body composition but not reproduction was affected in first-parity cows on both low and high levels of nutrition

4. Dual-purpose crops: the potential to increase cattle liveweight gains in winter across southern Australia

5. The impact of selecting for increased ewe fat level on reproduction and its potential to reduce supplementary feeding in a commercial composite flock

6. Reproductive performance of northern Australia beef herds. 2. Descriptive analysis of monitored reproductive performance

7. Season and reproductive status rather than genetic factors influence change in ewe weight and fat over time 2. Spline analysis of crossbred ewes

8. The wool production and reproduction of Merino ewes can be predicted from changes in liveweight during pregnancy and lactation

9. Performance of steer progeny of sires differing in genetic potential for fatness and meat yield following post-weaning growth at different rates. 1. Growth and live-animal composition

10. Economic effects of alternate growth path, time of calving and breed type combinations across southern Australian beef cattle environments: feedlot finishing at the New South Wales experimental site

11. Keys to innovation in animal science: genomics, big data and collaboration

12. New genomically enhanced reproduction breeding values for Merino sheep allow targeted selection for conception rate, litter size and ewe rearing ability

13. Effect of selenium supplementation on productive performance and antioxidant status of broilers under heat stress: a meta-analysis and a meta-regression

14. Decreasing the mob size but not stocking rate of ewes at lambing increases the survival of twin lambs born on farms across southern Australia

15. Growth and development of thoroughbred horses

16. Bodyweight performance, estimated carcass traits and methane emissions of beef-cattle categories grazing Andropogon gayanus, Melinis minutiflora and Stylosanthes capitata mixed swards and Brachiaria humidicola pasture

17. The potential impact of breeding strategies to reduce methane output from beef cattle

18. Potato processing waste in beef finishing diets; effects on performance, carcass and meat quality

19. Divergent genotypes for fatness or residual feed intake in Angus cattle. 7. Low-fat and low-RFI cows produce more liveweight and better gross margins than do high-fat and high-RFI cows when managed under the same conditions

20. Maternal body composition in seedstock herds. 5. Individual-trait selection direction aligns with breeder perspectives on maternal productivity

21. The nutrition of grazing ewes during pregnancy and lactation: relationships between herbage, supplement and milk intakes, and ewe and lamb liveweight and body composition

22. Effect of ruminal mechanical stimulating brushes on rumen fermentation and plasma oxidative stress and subsequent milk yield and composition in lactating dairy cattle

23. Microbiological quality and sensory evaluation of new cured products obtained from sheep and goat meat

24. Post-experimental modelling of grazing systems to improve profit and environmental outcomes using AusFarm

25. Genetic evaluation of adult ewe bodyweight and condition: relationship with lamb growth, reproduction, carcass and wool production

26. Reducing variation in pork production systems through maternal and pre- and post-weaning nutrition strategies

27. Validation of PigBal model predictions for pig manure production

28. Can feeding the broiler breeder improve chick quality and offspring performance?

29. Season and reproductive status rather than genetic factors influence change in ewe weight and fat over time. 4. Genetic relationships of ewe weight and fat score with fleece, reproduction and milk traits

30. Economic value of pregnancy scanning and optimum nutritional management of dry, single- and twin-bearing Merino ewes

31. Birthweight has no influence on chemical body composition and muscle energy stores in suckling piglets

32. Whole-grain feeding for chicken-meat production: possible mechanisms driving enhanced energy utilisation and feed conversion

33. The role and potential advantages of vitamin D metabolites in maintaining calcium status in high-producing dairy herds

34. The critical control points for increasing reproductive performance can be used to inform research priorities

35. Modelling the reduction in enteric methane from voluntary intake versus controlled individual animal intake of lipid or nitrate supplements

36. Potential integration of multi-fitting, inverse problem and mechanistic modelling approaches to applied research in animal science: a review

37. Increasing weight gain during pregnancy results in similar increases in lamb birthweights and weaning weights in Merino and non-Merino ewes regardless of sire type

38. Reproductive performance in the Sheep CRC Information Nucleus using artificial insemination across different sheep-production environments in southern Australia

39. Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises

40. The economic benefits of providing shelter to reduce the mortality of twin lambs in south-western Victoria

41. Evaluation of semen characteristics of the species Mazama americana in captivity

42. Male traits and herd reproductive capability in tropical beef cattle. 1. Experimental design and animal measures

43. Grazing systems and worm control in sheep: a long-term case study involving three management systems with analysis of factors influencing faecal worm egg count

44. Improving the nutrition of Merino ewes during pregnancy increases the fleece weight and reduces the fibre diameter of their progeny's wool during their lifetime and these effects can be predicted from the ewe's liveweight profile

45. Whole-farm profit and the optimum maternal liveweight profile of Merino ewe flocks lambing in winter and spring are influenced by the effects of ewe nutrition on the progeny's survival and lifetime wool production

46. The merit of condition score and fat score as alternatives to liveweight for managing the nutrition of ewes

47. Improving the nutrition of Merino ewes during pregnancy and lactation increases weaning weight and survival of progeny but does not affect their mature size

48. The birthweight and survival of Merino lambs can be predicted from the profile of liveweight change of their mothers during pregnancy

49. Continuous monitoring of ruminal pH using wireless telemetry

50. Accuracy of estimated genomic breeding values for wool and meat traits in a multi-breed sheep population