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ESPHM Congress to Focus on Less Invasive Diagnostic Sampling
2014-04-23 02:00:00| ThePigSite - Industry News
ITALY - A free, educational seminar about the benefits of collecting and testing oral fluids for diseases in swine will be held just before the 2014 European Symposium of Porcine Health Management (ESPHM).
Tags: focus
congress
diagnostic
sampling
ESPHM Congress to Feature Seminar on Less Invasive Diagnostic Sampling
2014-04-23 02:00:00| ThePigSite - Industry News
ITALY - A free, educational seminar about the benefits of collecting and testing oral fluids for diseases in swine will be held just before the 2014 European Symposium of Porcine Health Management (ESPHM).
Tags: feature
congress
seminar
diagnostic
Less Invasive Diagnostic Sampling Using Oral Fluids to Be Main Topic of Special Seminar at ESPHM Congress
2014-04-23 02:00:00| ThePigSite - Industry News
ITALY - A free, educational seminar about the benefits of collecting and testing oral fluids for diseases in swine will be held just before the 2014 European Symposium of Porcine Health Management (ESPHM).
Invasive Weeds Threaten Ireland's Waterways as Warming Temperatures Set Stage for More Growth
2014-03-26 21:02:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
Nature World: Rising global temperatures threaten to cause a resurgence of invasive water weeds that will threaten biodiversity and hamper tourism in Europe, according to a new study. Queen's University Belfast researchers report that a number of invasive weeds which have previously been killed off due to lower winter temperatures will thrive as global temperature increases. Writing in the journal Diversity and Distributions, the researchers predict that over the next 70 years these invasive water weeds...
Invasive species in waterways on rise due to climate change
2014-03-26 08:56:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
ScienceDaily: One of the most serious threats to global biodiversity and the leisure and tourism industries is set to increase with climate change according to new research by Queen's University Belfast. Researchers at Queen's have found that certain invasive weeds, which have previously been killed off by low winter temperatures, are set to thrive as global temperatures increase. The team based at Quercus, Northern Ireland's centre for biodiversity and conservation science research, predicts that invasive...
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