Equine Welfare Concerns: Horse Slaughter, Wild and Unwanted Horses (Wildlife Protection, Destruction and Extinction)

Read [Brand: Nova Science Pub Inc Book] Equine Welfare Concerns: Horse Slaughter, Wild and Unwanted Horses (Wildlife Protection, Destruction and Extinction) Online PDF eBook or Kindle ePUB free. Equine Welfare Concerns: Horse Slaughter, Wild and Unwanted Horses (Wildlife Protection, Destruction and Extinction) Virtually all the meat was for export, the largest markets being France, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, Japan and Mexico. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Most of these horses were raised for other purposes, like riding. Although U.S. This book explores equine welfare concerns with a focus on horse slaughter and the wild and unwanted horse issue.. slaughter has ended for the present, advocates continue to support federal legislation to ban it permanently. Nearly 105,000 horses were slaughtered fo

Equine Welfare Concerns: Horse Slaughter, Wild and Unwanted Horses (Wildlife Protection, Destruction and Extinction)

Author :
Rating : 4.44 (923 Votes)
Asin : 1621004279
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 186 Pages
Publish Date : 2014-09-29
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

"The expense doesn't match the content" according to Lynn. Expensive, not sure what makes this book over a hundred dollars. I used it for a class and will donate it to the library so students can use it without having to pay an exorbitant price for information.. awesome James L Garrett best information in a very long time.covered many things that you could'ny find else where.would recomend it to others. vry good book

Virtually all the meat was for export, the largest markets being France, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, Japan and Mexico. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Most of these horses were raised for other purposes, like riding. Although U.S. This book explores equine welfare concerns with a focus on horse slaughter and the wild and unwanted horse issue.. slaughter has ended for the present, advocates continue to support federal legislation to ban it permanently. Nearly 105,000 horses were slaughtered for human food in 2006, all in two foreign-owned Texas plants and a third foreign plant in Illinois, according to the U.S

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