Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Smith turned his attention to Texas fever, a debilitating cattle disease.
Texas fever is a disease caused by infection with Babesia.
The farmers, the ones who lose the stock, who see most of Texas fever, they think that?
In a little more than two weeks one of these cows was dead, and the other sick, of Texas fever.
Just then the stock-raisers were seriously upset by a very weird disease, the Texas fever.
This added to the knowledge of Texas Fever, which was the disease observed by Clemson.
And these experienced farmers one and all said: "No ticksno Texas fever!"
In cattle causes babesiosis disease, called "Texas fever".
For every northern cow, on whom he stuck his regiments of incubator ticks, came down with Texas fever.
Texas Fever is a western novel by Donald Hamilton.
(Bison do not contract Texas fever, for example, which afflicts cattle.)
Despite the veto, Crosby did take steps to halt cattle with Texas fever from being imported into the territory.
Through its research, the organization helped eradicate Texas fever, a bovine disease spread by ticks that threatened the state's cattle industry.
Texas fever may also refer to:
Koch thought malaria went from man to man just as Texas fever traveled from cow to cow.
The TAHC was founded in 1893 with a mission to address the Texas fever tick problem.
This opposition arose from the fact that the longhorns carried ticks that bore a serious disease that the farmers called Texas fever.
Texas Fever is a 1984 mini-album released by the Scottish post-punk band Orange Juice.
Throughout the North, Texas fever was generally accepted as a fact, and any one who had ever come in contact with it once, dreaded it ever afterward.
This territory lost half a million dollars' worth of native stock last fall from Texas fever, and this season they propose to apply the ounce of preventive.
In the blood of every beast dead of Texas fever he found themalways inside the corpuscles, wrecking the corpuscles, turning the blood to water.
Surely there was a chance of it (you remember that strange business of Theobald Smith's mother-ticks bequeathing the Texas fever microbe to their children).
During the campaign, a bout of "Texas fever" broke out, and Bilbo supported a program to dip cattle in insecticide to kill the ticks carrying the fever.
Under the pretense that we might receive orders at any time to overtake our herds, we declined all leadership in the second campaign about to be inaugurated against Texas fever.
To-day whole states are dipping their cattle and to-day Texas fever which once threatened the great myriads of American cattle is no longer a matter for concern.