Sunday, 3 November 2013

26 killed and over 200 wounded in Anambra church stampede.

   
Anambra church stampede.  over 26 lives were lost yesterday 2nd nov,2013 during a church stampede  at the Holy Ghost Adoration Ground, Uke, Idemili North LGA of Anambra State.
over 100,000 people were said to be gathered at the venue of the incident, with
facilities that can hardly take 5,000 people, when the stampede occurred. The tragic
incident has already become political, as the camps of Governor Peter Obi and Senator Chris
Ngige are trading blame over the incident.
About 200 victims that survived the anambra church stampede were taken hospitals in
Onitsha and Nkpor where a lot of them were treated and discharged.

Chris brown to be jailed for two years.


         

    This report of  Chris brown to be jailed for years came to our notice from MediaTakeOut website. MediaTakeOut  is the only gossip site in the world reporting that Chris Brown is about to be locked up for 2 years. If it was TMZ reporting this, I'd be really worried, but MTO have a way of exaggerating things. Hopefully this is not true. Below is how they are reporting Chris Brown's impending jail time.

MediaTakeOut.com just spoke with a very well placed insider - inside the Los Angeles Probation Department - and they tell us that they will ask that Chris Brown be taken to jail immediately  for two years..
The insider told us that the decision has already been made - they want Chris brown in jail for two years. And the department is working on a brief as we speak - to ensure that Chris brown gets locked up.

Asuu not ready to call off strike, says Dr Muhammed Kabir.

Asuu     Asuu not ready to call off strike, says Dr Muhammed Kabir. The academic staff union of universities,Asuu said they are not ready to call off the ongoing Asuu strike until FG have completely granted them their request.
          Dr Muhammed Kabir Aliyu, Chairman of ASUU, Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria chapter made this known  while speaking with newsmen shortly after their congress meeting on Friday in Zaria.        Aliyu believes that, “the federal government has not shown any sign of sincerity in keeping to the agreement reached in 2009 and ASUU will only call off the strike once our demands are met by the federal government.”


“The issue at stakes is that the federal government is not sincere. The government is trying to re-negotiate what we have already negotiated and agreed with them. The union presented a demand in 2006, which led to the 2009 agreement. They (government) should implement what they have agreed upon.

How to increase your website traffic .

        
How to increase  your website traffic . many site owners are faced with difficulty of how to attract visitors to their web site or how to increase their website traffic.  This article with guide you properly on how you can comfortably drag millions of visitors to your website. The following tips am about to give you,when followed effectively will automatically help to increase your website traffic.

step on getting high website traffic

1)   Balance your page.
To increase your website traffic , it is very important that you balance your page because when users enter a website, their focus first starts at the top left of the page and hovers there before slowly tracking to the right. The web user is focused more on the text of the page, rather than images or graphics. This is where balance comes into place.

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Livestock production and it's importance to manpower development.

        
livestockLivestock production and it's importance to man.  Livestocks includes animals raised in an agricultural setting for food, fiber and labor.Livestock are generally raised for profit. Raising animals  is a component of modern agriculture.
The economic importance of livestock includes:
Meat
the production of a useful form of dietary protein and energy
Dairy products
Mammalian livestock can be used as a source of milk, which can in turn easily be processed into other dairy products, such as yogurt, cheese, butter, ice cream, kefir, and kumis. Using livestock for this purpose can often yield several times the food energy of slaughtering the animal outright.
Fiber .
Livestock produce a range of fiber/textiles. For example, sheep and goats produce wool and mohair; cows, deer, and sheep skins can be made into leather; and bones, hooves and horns of livestock can be used.

Methods of fish farming


Methods of fish farming.   Fish farming is the commercial production of fish, usually in tanks or enclosures,for the purpose of human consumption. the most important fish species used in fish farming includes carp, salmon, tilapia and catfish.in fish farming, natural members is generally referred to as a fish hatchery.
the pesistent increase in the damand of fish and fish protein,have resulted to overfishing in wild fishing.fish farming have been a good alternative to provide fish consumers with enough fish to eat. fish farming is also another alternative to fish marketers.However, farming carnivorous fish, such as salmon, does not always reduce pressure on wild fisheries, since carnivorous farmed fish are usually fed fishmeal and fish oil extracted from wild forage fish.


Two categories of fish aquaculture

the two major categories of aquaculture includes
1)extensive aquaculture
2)intensive aquaculture
extensive aquaculture based on local photosynthetical production and intensive aquaculture, in which the fish are fed with external food supply.
In extensive aquaculture the major problem to the fish growth is the unavailablility of adquate food supply by natural sources, commonly zooplankton feeding on pelagic algae or benthic animals, such as crustaceans and mollusks. Tilapia species filter feed directly on phytoplankton, which makes higher production possible. The photosynthetic production can be increased by fertilizing the pond water with artificial fertilizer mixtures, such as potash, phosphorus, nitrogen and micro-elements. Because most fish are carnivorous, they occupy a higher place in the trophic chain and therefore only a tiny fraction of primary photosynthetic production (typically 1%) will be converted into harvest-able fish.

Another issue is the risk of algal blooms. When temperatures, nutrient supply and available sunlight are optimal for algal growth, algae multiply their biomass at an exponential rate, eventually leading to an exhaustion of available nutrients and a subsequent die-off. The decaying algal biomass will deplete the oxygen in the pond water because it blocks out the sun and pollutes it with organic and inorganic solutes (such as ammonium ions), which can (and frequently do) lead to massive loss of fish.
In order to tap all available food sources in the pond, the aquaculturist will choose fish species which occupy different places in the pond ecosystem, e.g., a filter algae feeder such as tilapia, a benthic feeder such as carp or catfish and a zooplankton feeder (various carps) or submerged weeds feeder such as grass carp.
In the intensive systems fish production per unit of surface can be increased at will, as long as sufficient oxygen, fresh water and food are provided. Because of the requirement of sufficient fresh water, a massive water purification system must be integrated in the fish farm. A clever way to achieve this is the combination of hydroponic horticulture and water treatment, see below. The exception to this rule are cages which are placed in a river or sea, which supplements the fish crop with sufficient oxygenated water. Some environmentalists object to this practice.

The cost of inputs per unit of fish weight is higher in intensive fish farming than in extensive fish farming, especially because of the high cost of fish feed, which must contain a much higher level of protein (up to 60%) than cattle food and a balanced amino acid composition as well. However, these higher protein level requirements are a consequence of the higher food conversion efficiency (FCR—kg of feed per kg of animal produced) of aquatic animals. Fish like salmon have FCR's in the range of 1.1 kg of feed per kg of salmon[citation needed] whereas chickens are in the 2.5 kg of feed per kg of chicken range. Fish don't have to stand up or keep warm and this eliminates a lot of carbohydrates and fats in the diet, required to provide this energy. This frequently is offset by the lower land costs and the higher productions which can be obtained due to the high level of input control.fish farming3
Aeration of the water in fish farming
Aeration of the water, as fish need a sufficient oxygen level for growth. This is achieved by bubbling, cascade flow or aqueous oxygen. Catfish, Clarias spp. can breathe atmospheric air and can tolerate much higher levels of pollutants than trout or salmon, which makes aeration and water purification less necessary and makes Clarias species especially suited for intensive fish production. In some Clarias farms about 10% of the water volume can consist of fish biomass.
The risk of infections by parasites like fish lice, fungi (Saprolegnia spp.), intestinal worms (such as nematodes or trematodes), bacteria (e.g., Yersinia spp., Pseudomonas spp.), and protozoa (such as Dinoflagellates) is similar to animal husbandry, especially at high population densities. However, animal husbandry is a larger and more technologically mature area of human agriculture and better solutions to pathogen problem exist. Intensive aquaculture does have to provide adequate water quality (oxygen, ammonia, nitrite, etc.) levels to minimize stress, which makes the pathogen problem more difficult. This means, intensive aquaculture requires tight monitoring and a high level of expertise of the fish farmer.
water quality
Control of water quality is crucial. Fertilizing, clarifying and pH control of the water can increase yields substantially, as long as eutrophication is prevented and oxygen levels stay high.Yields can be low if the fish grow ill from electrolyte stress.

Composite fish culture
The Composite fish culture system is a technology developed in India by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research in the 1970s. In this system both local and imported fish species, a combination of five or six fish species is used in a single fish pond. These species are selected so that they do not compete for food among them having different types of food habitats.[8][9] As a result the food available in all the parts of the pond is used. Fish used in this system include catla and silver carp which are surface feeders, rohu a column feeder and mrigal and common carp which are bottom feeders. Other fish will also feed on the excreta of the common carp and this helps contribute to the efficiency of the system which in optimal conditions will produce 3000–6000 kg of fish per hectare per year.
One of the largest problems with freshwater pisciculture is that it can use a million gallons of water per acre (about 1 m³ of water per m²) each year. Extended water purification systems allow for the reuse (recycling) of local water.

The largest-scale pure fish farms use a system derived (admittedly much refined) from the New Alchemy Institute in the 1970s. Basically, large plastic fish tanks are placed in a greenhouse. A hydroponic bed is placed near, above or between them. When tilapia are raised in the tanks, they are able to eat algae, which naturally grows in the tanks when the tanks are properly fertilized.
The tank water is slowly circulated to the hydroponic beds where the tilapia waste feeds commercial plant crops. Carefully cultured microorganisms in the hydroponic bed convert ammonia to nitrates, and the plants are fertilized by the nitrates and phosphates. Other wastes are strained out by the hydroponic media, which doubles as an aerated pebble-bed filter.
feed in fish farming
The issue of feeds in fish farming has been a controversial one. Many cultured fishes (tilapia, carp, catfish, many others) require no meat or fish products in their diets. Top-level carnivores (most salmon species) depend on fish feed of which a portion is usually derived from wild caught (anchovies, menhaden, etc.). Vegetable-derived proteins have successfully replaced fish meal in feeds for carnivorous fishes, but vegetable-derived oils have not successfully been incorporated into the diets of carnivores.
Secondly, farmed fish are kept in concentrations never seen in the wild (e.g. 50,000 fish in a 2-acre (8,100 m2) area. with each fish occupying less room than the average bathtub. This can cause several forms of pollution. Packed tightly, fish rub against each other and the sides of their cages, damaging their fins and tails and becoming sickened with various diseases and infections. This also causes stress.
Other potential problems faced by Aquaculturists are the obtaining of various permits and water-use rights, profitability, concerns about invasive species and genetic engineering depending on what species are involved, and interaction with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
In regards to genetically modified farmed salmon, concern has been raised over their proven reproductive advantage and how it could potentially decimate local fish populations, if released into the wild. Biologist Rick Howard  did a controlled laboratory study where wild fish and GMO fish were allowed to breed. The GMO fish crowded out the wild fish in spawning beds, but the offspring were less likely to survive. The colorant used to make pen-raised salmon appear rosy like their wild cousins has been linked with retinal problems in humans.
For more information on fish farming call mr ifeanyi 07062626974 or visit more posts on newsworldng.com

Most effective methods of poultry farming in the world.

poultry farming
                 
 Poultry farming is a common practice in the world,it involves keeping and raising of domesticated birds. examples of such birds in cludes  ducks,chickens, turkeys e.t.c  for the aim of egg and meat prodution for mankind.  mllions of birds are produced annually, which includes over 40million chickens. chickens which are raised  for meat are  refered to as broilers while those raised for eeg prodution are called layers.