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Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
When the Cows Come Home in the Alps, the Swiss Eat Raclette
Every September, dairy farmers herd cattle from high-alpine pastures back to the villages where they reside for the winter ...
This summer's heat has been hard on people across Northwest Missouri, but it's also taken a toll on other residents: cattle. When temperatures climb above 72 degrees Fahrenheit, cattle begin to ...
4hon MSN
How gene editing is changing the meat in our diet, from fast-growing fish to heat-tolerant cows
Disease-resistant pigs, faster-growing fish and heat-tolerant cows are among a new class of animals that are being genetically engineered for the dining table. Similar meat products could soon be sold ...
Due to the immense work cows must do to process food through four stomachs and produce gallons of milk daily, they’re more prone to overheating and vulnerable to climate change.
1hon MSN
FBI 'ENEMIES LIST' Bombshell In Senate Hearing; Kash Patel Slams Senator Sheldon | 'I Won't Reveal'
Bigg Boss 19: Baseer Ali and Kunickaa Sadanand lose their calm over missing belongings; “Captain mere saman ke sath chedchad ...
Lawyers requested swift cooling measures in a prison with no A/C. One man shares the dangerous conditions inside while people ...
Those experiences influenced one of Zokaites’ latest projects: He was one of nine artists commissioned this year to bring ...
Dale Blasi, Kansas State University beef cattle nutrition professor, told the audience at the recent HPJ Live how to most ...
George Foster, a third-generation farmer in Middlebury, cut corn on a neighbor’s farm on Tuesday to help feed his 950 cows ...
6don MSN
Study links more frequent and severe heat waves to pollution from major fossil fuel producers
The set of heat waves in the study came from the EM-DAT International Disaster Database, which the researchers described as ...
Canton Repository on MSN
Farmers in Stark, Carroll counties pounded by drought conditions with no rain in sight
Farmers in Stark and Carroll counties say they continue to be impacted by Ohio's drought conditions and lack of rain this season.
Cascading, compounding and concurrent” climate risks could push down property prices by $600 billion, detailed new government ...
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