|
January, 2003 Table of Contents
News & Views Archive
Issues
Economics
Now's the Time
to Measure Financial Progress by Paul Joerger
The end of the calendar business year is a good time to perform a financial analysis
of your farm or ranch business.
Forage
Is Your Hay Cut Right but Baled
Wrong? by James Rogers
Hay baled at a too-high moisture content can have decreased digestibility and
significant increases in fiber concentrations and heat-damaged nitrogen.
Horticulture
Consider
Transplant Size when Looking for Extra-Early Hoop House Tomato Yields by
Steve Upson
Many hoop house tomato growers believe that larger transplants translate into
earlier yields. The Noble Foundation conducted a study to determine if that's
really the case.
Livestock
How Will Cold Fronts
Affect Your Cowherd's Energy Requirements? by Clay Wright
In winter, keeping warm is the largest part of a cow's maintenance requirement,
and her energy needs in the face of a cold weather event depend on wind chill
and if the front is wet or dry.
Research
Separating
Facts from Error is the Key to Good Research by Bryan Unruh
A well-designed experiment incorporates all possible ways of minimizing experimental
error, because the ability to detect differences among treatments increases as
the size of the experimental error decreases.
Soils
Eastern Red Cedar is
Public Enemy Number One by Jim Johnson
Eastern red cedar, which is native to Oklahoma, historically was controlled by
fires. Since that isn't the case anymore, land that was once open prairie is
covered with cedar and no longer provides grazing for livestock.
Wildlife
Are We Seeing the
Return of the Bobwhite? by Russell Stevens
The Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation has indicated an increase in
late summer and early fall quail numbers. Does this signal a true increase in
quail population or is it just a momentary upswing in the long decline of quail
in Oklahoma?
|