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Breeding / Calving Issues
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<blockquote data-quote="J Hoy" data-source="post: 1812998" data-attributes="member: 16398"><p>See my other post. One of the things that the teratogenic pesticides do is cause death to the fetus or to the newborn immediately after it is born. All of the teratogenic pesticides have been found in the rain and in the surface water. The rain falls on all the foliage eaten by grazing animals. Check the dead calf for underbite. Now I know I am going to get yelled at, but the bite on all calves that die should be checked. If a calf has an underbite/short and narrow premaxillary bone and thus narrow dental pad, (or an overbite/short lower jaw forward of the premolars), you should assume that the calf was exposed in the womb to the teratogenic pesticides I listed in my previous post. The same teratogenic pesticides kill children similarly to other mammals, like calves, goats, horse foals, deer fawns, etc. Imidacloprid was found to cross directly through the placenta of a human mother to be and go into the fetus. If it can do that to a human, it most likely can do it to any mammal. Nearly all pregnant women tested for exposure to imidacloprid, tested positive.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J Hoy, post: 1812998, member: 16398"] See my other post. One of the things that the teratogenic pesticides do is cause death to the fetus or to the newborn immediately after it is born. All of the teratogenic pesticides have been found in the rain and in the surface water. The rain falls on all the foliage eaten by grazing animals. Check the dead calf for underbite. Now I know I am going to get yelled at, but the bite on all calves that die should be checked. If a calf has an underbite/short and narrow premaxillary bone and thus narrow dental pad, (or an overbite/short lower jaw forward of the premolars), you should assume that the calf was exposed in the womb to the teratogenic pesticides I listed in my previous post. The same teratogenic pesticides kill children similarly to other mammals, like calves, goats, horse foals, deer fawns, etc. Imidacloprid was found to cross directly through the placenta of a human mother to be and go into the fetus. If it can do that to a human, it most likely can do it to any mammal. Nearly all pregnant women tested for exposure to imidacloprid, tested positive. [/QUOTE]
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