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TM Davison

Researcher at University of New England (Australia)

Publications -  39
Citations -  667

TM Davison is an academic researcher from University of New England (Australia). The author has contributed to research in topics: Dairy cattle & Pasture. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 39 publications receiving 542 citations. Previous affiliations of TM Davison include Durham University.

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Relationships among calving season, heat load, energy balance and postpartum ovulation of dairy cows in a subtropical environment

TL;DR: The study was designed to examine the relationships among calving season, energy balance, temperature humidity index (THI), and postpartum ovulation in high producing cows in a subtropical environment.
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Holstein-Friesian dairy cows under a predominantly grazing system: interaction between genotype and environment.

TL;DR: A significant genetic merit by environment (level of feeding) interaction for reproduction and most production parameters when considered in terms of the individual cow and the whole farm system are shown.
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Reproductive performance in holstein-friesian cows in relation to genetic merit and level of feeding when grazing pasture

TL;DR: The results of the present study indicate that the reproductive performance of HGM cows, with a mean of 61% North American (NA) genes, is lower than LGM cows (22% NA genes) under a predominantly pasture-based system of farming.
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Carbon myopia: The urgent need for integrated social, economic and environmental action in the livestock sector

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the global distribution of livestock GHG emissions, explore social, economic and environmental co-benefits and trade-offs associated with mitigation interventions and critique approaches for quantifying GHG emission.
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Methane Emissions from Ruminants in Australia: Mitigation Potential and Applicability of Mitigation Strategies.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated several strategies to quantify their methane mitigation potential, their impact on animal productivity and their likelihood of adoption, and concluded that three-nitrooxypropanol and Asparagopsis supplements reduced methane emissions by 40+% and 90%, respectively.