For major requirements, see the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources section of this Catalog. For 2-year course listing, refer to Ratcliffe Hicks School of Agriculture (SAAS).
1001. Introduction to Animal Science
(120) First semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour discussion or laboratory period. Taught concurrently with SAAS 101. Darre
The biological, physical, and social factors that influence animal production and utilization.
1602. Behavior and Training of Domestic Animals
(125) Second semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour laboratory. Taught concurrently with SAAS 202. Darre
Application of behavior of cattle, horses, sheep, goats, swine and poultry to their management, training and welfare. Basic principles of genetics and physiology of behavior, perception, training, learning, motivation, and stress with consideration of integrated behavioral management and animal welfare.
1645. The Science of Food
(160) (Also offered as NUSC 1645.) Either semester. Three credits.
An introductory level course for students interested in the application of science to food. Nutritional and functional attributes of various food constituents are discussed. Issues concerning food processing and food safety are covered. CA 3.
1676. Introduction to Companion Animals
(127) Second semester. Three credits. Taught concurrently with SAAS 276.
Basic concepts of the nutrition, physiology, health and management of companion animals.
1693. Foreign Studies in Animal Science
(193) Either semester. Variable credits (1-15). Hours by arrangement. May be repeated for credit. Open only by instructor consent.
Variable topics.
1695. Special Topics Lecture
(195) Either semester. Credits, prerequisites, and hours as determined by the Senate Curricula and Courses Committee. May be repeated for credit with a change in topic.
2111. Principles of Animal Nutrition
(216) First semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour discussion and laboratory period. Recommended preparation: Introductory chemistry and an animal anatomy and physiology course. Govoni
Focuses on digestive anatomy; the classes of nutrients including their digestion, use and sources. Nutrient requirements and feeding standards for various classes of livestock for reproduction, lactation, growth, work and maintenance are included. Feed requirements, feed laws, feed additives and labeling requirements are also discussed. Attention will also be given to characteristics of common feedstuffs and to formulating rations and nutritional programs for animal enterprise.
2251. Horse Science
(235) First semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour laboratory or discussion period. Nadeau
Valuable to animal science majors. Includes horse types and breeds and their nutrition, breeding, evaluation, behavior, care and management with attention given to detailed studies of the problems and practices of horse production and use.
2271. Principles of Poultry Science
(254) Second semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour laboratory period. Darre
The application of the basic scientific principles to the management of poultry, egg and meat production systems. Field trips are required.
2690. Animal Science Field Excursions
(291) Either semester. One credit. Open only with instructor consent. May be repeated for credit with a change of topic.
A multiple day field trip format. Students in this course will travel with the instructor to visit and tour agri-businesses that represent commercial aspects of different animal science activities. Students will interview agri-business personnel and gain an understanding of how agricultural principles are applied in the field. Each student must submit a formal written report for evaluation and meet all other course requirements as specified by the instructor. Field trip is required.
2695. Special Topics
(298) Either semester. Credits and hours by arrangement. Open only with instructor consent. May be repeated for credit with a change of topic. Contact Department Main Office for list of current topics and instructors.
2699. Independent Study
(299) Either or both semesters. Credits and hours by arrangement of instructor. May be repeated for credit. Instructor consent required.
3121. Principles of Animal Genetics
(217) First semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: BIOL 1107: open to juniors or higher. Recommended preparation: BIOL 1108. Rasmussen
Principles of Mendelian and molecular genetics. Biosynthesis and function of DNA, RNA, and protein. This course also includes introductions to population and quantitative genetics. Information on molecular methods of genetic analysis and examples of genetics in animals of agricultural significance are also provided.
3122. Reproductive Physiology
(219) Second semester. Four credits. Three class periods and one 2-hour laboratory period. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Milvae
A study of the reproductive anatomy and physiology of domestic animals. Laboratory will include macro and micro anatomy, hormone action, and techniques used in reproductive management of domestic animals. A fee of $75 is charged for this course.
3194. Seminar
(295) Second semester. One credit. One 2-hour discussion period. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Govoni
A discussion of current employment opportunities in animal agriculture. In addition, students will prepare resumes and present oral talks.
3261. Dairy Cattle Management
(275) First semester of even numbered years. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour laboratory period. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Taught concurrently with SAAS 261. Kazmer
Management of dairy cattle including milking procedures, sanitation, selection, nutrition, reproduction, physiology and anatomy of milk secretion and record keeping. Field trips required.
3272. Laboratory Animal Science
(269) Second semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour laboratory or discussion period. Prerequisite: BIOL 1107. Recommended preparation: BIOL 1108 or equivalent. Milvae
Principles and practices of laboratory animal care and management in relation to animal characteristics, handling and restraint, animal house design, reproduction and nutrition and legal regulations. Various laboratory animal techniques will be covered. A $75 fee is charged for this course.
3273. Livestock Management
(273) First semester. Four credits. Three class periods and one 2-hour laboratory period. Taught jointly with SAAS 273. Hoagland
The production and management of beef cattle, sheep, and swine. Laboratories involve theory and practice in livestock management, skills and techniques.
3313. Growth Biology and Metabolism in Domestic Livestock
(222) Second semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour discussion period. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Recommended preparation: PVS 2100. Zinn
Focuses on the embryonic and postnatal growth and development of domestic livestock with emphasis on metabolic and hormonal regulation of processes that influence growth and development. Discussion period will focus on methods used to measure growth and metabolism.
3314W. Scientific Writing in Growth Biology and Metabolism of Domestic Livestock
(223W) Second semester. One credit. Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 3800; open to juniors or higher. Corequisite: ANSC 3313.
Zinn
A writing intesive class integrated with course content in ANSC 3313.
3323. Animal Embryology and Biotechnology
(229) First semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Recommended preparation: ANSC 3122 or MCB 4219. Tian
Introduction to recent research in animal embryology and related reproductive biotechnologies. Basic principles, methodology and state of the technology for numerous established and emerging animal biotechnologies such as transgenesis and cloning. Lab tours, hands-on experience.
3343. Animal Food Products
(253) First semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 3-hour laboratory. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Mancini
A study of the food products derived from animal agriculture, including dairy, meat, poultry and fish. Emphasis will be placed on inspection, grading, processing, biochemistry, nutritive value and food safety concerns of these products. A fee of $50 is charged for this course.
3344W. Scientific Writing in Animal Food Products
(255W) First semester. One credit. Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 3800; open to juniors or higher. Corequisite: ANSC 3343. Mancini
A writing intensive class integrated course content in ANSC 3343.
3452. Horse Breeding Farm Management
(238) Second semester. Three credits. One class period and two 2-hour laboratory or discussion periods. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Recommended preparation: ANSC 2251. Dinger
Designed to develop technical and managerial skills necessary for operating horse breeding farms. Programs for herd health, hoof care, nutrition, breeding, foaling, and record keeping will be included.
3453. Pleasure Horse Appreciation and Use
(234) Either semester. One credit. One 1-hour lecture and one 1-hour laboratory. Not open to students who have passed ANSC 3456.
Open to all University students interested in pleasure horses. The principles of horse management and horsemanship. A $75 fee is charged for this course.
3454. Horse Selection and Evaluation
(281) Second semester. Two credits. One 4-hour laboratory or discussion period. Taught concurrently with SAAS 254. Not open for credit to graduate students. Consent of instructor is required. Bennett
Comparative evaluation, classification and selection of horses according to conformation, breed characteristics and performance. Judging skills including justification of placings through presentation of oral reasons will be developed. The Intercollegiate Horse Judging Team may be selected from this course. Field trips are required.
3455. Developing the Driving Horse
(231 First semester. Two credits. One 1-hour lecture and two 1-hour laboratories. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher; open by consent only. Bennett
Techniques related to training the driving horse will be described. Prior working experience with horses is recommended.
3456. Light Horse Training and Management
(236) Second semester. Two credits. Three 1-hour laboratory and one 1-hour lecture period. Prerequisite: ANSC 2251; open only with consent of instructor.
The theory, fundamentals and practice of breaking, training, fitting, showing, and the use of horses for riding. Primarily for Animal Science majors.
3621. Animal Biotechnology Laboratory
First semester. One credit. One 4-hour class period every other week. Prerequisite: ANSC 3121 or equivalent. Recommended preparation: ANSC 3122 or equivalent. Instructor consent required. Tian
Focuses on the use of basic methods used in agricultural biotechnology research, including embryo manipulation, real-time PCR, karotyping, SNP analysis and gene database searches and sequence alignment techniques.
3641. Animal Food Products: Dairy Technology
(252) Second semester. Three credits. Consent of instructor required.
The study of milk and milk-products from a food science perspective including production and processing, the chemical, physical and microbiological components, the technological aspects of the transformation of milk into various food products, public health regulations, good manufacturing practices, cleaning and sanitizing procedures, unit operations in dairy food manufacturing, packaging, labeling and quality control procedures.
3642W. Scientific Writing in Animal Food Products: Dairy Technology
(256W) Second semester. One credit. Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 3800. Corequisite: ANSC 3641.
A writing intensive course integrated with course content in ANSC 3641.
3663. Dairy Management Decision-making
(278) Both semesters. One credit. One 2-hour discussion period. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Consent of instructor required. May be repeated twice for credit. Kazmer
Participation in all phases of dairy herd management including decision-making activities, with particular emphasis on impact of decisions on financial health and stability. Course requires participation beyond specific semester calendar.
3664. Dairy Cattle Evaluation
(284) Second semester. One credit. One 2-hour laboratory or discussion period. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Kazmer
An introduction to the evaluation of dairy cattle on the basis of conformation. Breed classification and type improvement programs, score card criteria in relation to longevity, physiological efficiency and performance are included. Attention is also given to fitting and showing methods. Field trips may be required.
3674. Livestock and Carcass Evaluation
(283) Second semester. Two credits. Two 2-hour laboratory periods. Taught concurrently with SAAS 274. Not open for credit to graduate students. Hoagland
Classification, form to function relationships, grades and value differences of livestock are included. Objective and subjective methods of appraisal are used to evaluate beef cattle, horses, sheep and swine.
3675. Advanced Animal and Product Evaluation
(288) First semester. One credit. One 2-hour laboratory or discussion period. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Taught concurrently with SAAS 275. Not open for credit to graduate students. May be repeated once for credit. Open only with instructor consent.
Intensive training in the evaluation of selected species of farm animals or their products. Type standards and the relation of anatomical features to physiological function are emphasized. Evaluation skills including justification of decisions will be developed. Intercollegiate dairy cattle, horse, livestock, poultry judging teams will be selected from this course. Field trips are required, some of which may occur prior to the start of the semester.
3691. Professional Internship
(296) Either semester. Credits and hours by arrangement. Prerequisite: Open only to juniors and seniors with instructor consent. Students taking this course will be assigned a final grade of S (satisfactory) or U (unsatisfactory). Andrew, Darre, Milvae
3693.Foreign Studies in Animal Science
(293) Either semester. Variable credits, 1-15 . Hours by arrangement. May be repeated for credit. Open only by instructor consent.
Variable topics
4341. Food Microbiology and Safety
(224) Second semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: BIOL 1107; open to juniors or higher. A one semester course in organic chemistry is recommended. Venkitanarayanan
Current topics in food safety will be discussed, with special emphasis on microbial and chemical contamination of food. Specific topics including the safety of natural versus synthetic chemicals, food additives, irradiation and other practices, basic microbiology and toxicology, current regulatory practices and risk assessment will also be included. The Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP) approach to food safety will be discussed.
4457. Methods of Equitation Instruction
(237) Second semester. Two credits. One class period and one 2-hour laboratory or discussion period. Taught concurrently with SAAS 257. Consent of instructor required. Intermediate II or above riding experience required.
The techniques and procedures of teaching equitation including the theories of riding and teaching methods. Practice teaching will be required under the supervision of the instructor.
4642. Food Microbiology Laboratory
(227) Second semester. Even numbered years. One credit. One 3-hour laboratory session. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Recommended preparation: MCB 2610. Venkitanarayanan.
An introductory laboratory course in sampling of foods for microbiological analysis, enumeration of microorganisms in foods, and isolation and identification of major foodborne pathogens from foods.
4662W. Dairy Herd Management
(277WC) Second semester, odd numbered years. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour laboratory period. Taught concurrently with SAAS 262. Prerequisite: ANSC 3261; ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 3800; open to juniors or higher. Kazmer
Dairy farm management practices with emphasis on business and economic decision making. The effects of various programs in selection, nutrition, facilities, reproduction and herd health on overall business health will be evaluated. Each student will manage a computer simulated herd during the semester. Field trips are required.
4697W. Undergraduate Honors Thesis Writing in Animal Science
(297W) Either semester. One credit. Hours by arrangement. Prerequisite: Three credits of ANSC 2699 which may be taken concurrently; ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 3800; open to juniors or higher. Open only with consent of instructor.
Writing of a formal thesis based on independent research conducted by the student. Thesis proposal and final thesis must follow guidelines developed by the department.
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