“…which produces 'the farm' as an effect of a network'. The role of non-humans in such rural networks as 'ecosystem engineers' is emphasized when the '"taken for granted" social, cultural and economic interactions between humans, livestock and landscapes' (Convery et al, 2005: 100) are disturbed by, for example, the impacts of disease (Sellick and Yarwood, 2013). The assemblages of farmers and livestock in particular places are locally and historically grounded (Holloway and Morris, 2014;Yarwood and Evans, 2006), and form interconnected and internally reinforcing farming cultures (Gray, 1996) that govern how farmers engage with the nonhuman elements of their farms and what being a 'good farmer' entails (Burton, 2012;Holloway, 2002;Silvasti, 2003a).…”