Baer, Werner arid Beckerman, Paul. "Inflation without Distortiijnco An Fva(uatio5 us Brazil's Indexing System. World Development 2 (Oc(ober.Decemher 1974; 354' Carva(ho, Livio R. A/. Pnncipios e Appleaç,)o cia l'ii/iti(,i Saiarjal Pn5 I 964 Dis(0550, NOTE: This is an expanded verSion of a paper read at the 1PF.NBER Seminar on indexatiofl, São Paulo, Februan' 26-28 1975 for their most helpful comments on an earlier draft I owe a debt of gratitude to lose
Six Holstein steers, 6 mo of age, with a BW range of 180 to 200 kg were used to determine effects of abomasal casein infusion and recombinant bovine somatotropin on amino acid absorption and metabolism in the gut and liver. Catheters were positioned in the hepatic vein, the hepatic portal vein, two mesenteric veins, and a mesenteric artery. Using the same basal diet, treatments consisted of 1) basal diet only (Control), 2) abomasal casein infusion of 300 g/d (Casein), and 3) abomasal casein infusion plus daily injection of 20 mg of bovine somatotropin (ST). All steers were fed the basal diet at a rate of 24 g/kg of BW on a DM basis, in 12 equal meals at 2-h intervals. Initially, Casein and ST treatments were in a balanced cross-over design, and then all steers received the Control treatment. Casein infusion tended to increase BW gain but did not affect BW gain per unit of N intake. The ST treatment increased weight gain (P < .01) and efficiency of dietary DM (P < .01) and N (P < .01) utilization by more than 40% and increased the percentage of absorbed N retained. Nonessential, essential, and total amino acid fluxes in portal-drained viscera (PDV) and their net removal by the liver were not affected by casein infusion. However, ST tended to reduce PDV flux of essential, nonessential, and total amino acids by approximately 30%, and their removal by the liver (P < .08). As a result, ST increased, compared with casein, release of essential (P < .06) and total (P < .10) amino acids from the total splanchnic pool (TSP) into peripheral blood. The ST treatment increased the availability of absorbed amino acids to peripheral tissues, but it did not affect the amino acid profile delivered from splanchnic tissues, especially that of essential amino acids.
This article presents for the first time a portrait of intramural research conducted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). We describe the nature, characteristics, and use of USDA research based on scientometric indicators using patent analysis and three bibliometric methods: publication analysis, citation analysis, and science mapping. Our analyses are intended to be purely descriptive in nature. They demonstrate that USDA maintains several core scientific competencies and its research is much broader than and reaches well beyond traditional agricultural sciences for which it is best known. We illustrate the current status, recent trends, and clear benchmarks for planning and assessing future USDA research across an array of scientific disciplines.
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