Pengusaha Rumah Gelap

Pengusaha Rumah Gelap
Rumah Gelap Simbol Kejayaan dan Kekayaan Pemilik

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Saturday, June 30, 2012

Ara liar bukit


Thursday, June 28, 2012

Ara merah kembali lagi


Sekiranya anda ingin menggunakan pokok arau ntuk memikat burung walet, saya sarankan ara merah penang lebih baik kerana buahnya lebat sampai ke ranting dan keadaan ini memudahkan walet memburu serangga diatas canopy. keaadaan Daun yang agak jarang berbanding dengan ara2 lain, ini juga memberi kelebihan kepada burung walet memburu mangsanya.
Hampir setiap petang burung walet berpusing pusing memburu serangga diatas canopy pokok ara ini bila buahnya mula masak. 











Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Suara menghasikan 80 sarang tempoh 12 bulan

Sumbangan dari keluarga Wanzulswiftlet untuk para Pemikat Walet seantero dunia


Indonesia produce birds flu vaccine

Antimicrobials that Destroy Bacteria, Solve Resistance



26 June 2012
USDA ARS
USDA
US - US Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientists have developed a new method to create antimicrobials that kill disease-causing pathogens. These antimicrobials can be used as an alternative to antibiotics.
Growing concerns about antibiotic resistance to certain strains of bacteria and increasing restrictions on the use of antibiotics in animals has accelerated the need to find alternatives. Scientists with the Agricultural Research Service (ARS), the chief intramural scientific agency of USDA, are working to provide new strategies for enhancing production and improving overall animal health. This research supports the USDA priority of promoting international food security.

The patented technology for designing pathogen-targeted antimicrobials is the work of molecular biologist David Donovan at the ARS Henry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Centre (BARC) in Beltsville, Maryland. Mr Donovan works in the center's Animal Biosciences and Biotechnology Laboratory.

Viruses that infect bacteria, called bacteriophages (phages), produce enzymes that can be used to kill pathogens. These novel enzymes have been shown to be effective in killing pathogens like streptococci and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, also known as MRSA.
Collaborating with industry, university and federal scientists, Mr Donovan demonstrated that these particular enzymes have molecular domains that can be isolated and will act independently of their protein surroundings. They kill bacteria by eating or chewing up the walls of cells.

The enzymes can be manipulated to create an antimicrobial that targets and kills only specific pathogens. This greatly reduces the probability that non-targeted bacteria will develop resistance.

Test lokasi Sg Bakap penang

Ribuan burung walet datang semasa ujian lokasi di Sg bakap. Lokasi walet memburu serangga

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Arnab baka kacukan untuk dilelong

Pihak kami sudah tidakberupaya  mengurus arnab - arnab ini yang dahulunya dibela secara hobi sahaja. Oleh kerana pembiakan terlalu cepat dengan bantuan wanzulswiftlet berserta rezeki yang murah  daripda ALLAH hari ini bilangan sudah mencapai 60 ekor dan terus bertambah pada setiap hari.




kepada sesiapa yang berminat boleh hubungi wanzul...   013 441 9070     talian 24jam

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

test lokasi

"http://www.youtube.com/embed/UiksaOYOEXE"

Enjoy the video..walet beratur masuk dalam RBW pertama


Monday, June 18, 2012

Artis ini Hina Isteri Nabi Muhammad S.A.W.

Islamic Scholars Reject Machine Slaughter



18 June 2012
UK - Leading Islamic scholars have unanimously rejected the automated slaughter of halal poultry using machines with rotary blades, insisting each animal must be killed with a hand held knife.
According to HalalFocus.com, some 35 scholars attended a debate on religious slaughter and all rejected the mechanisation of the procedure under halal law, according to the meeting organiser, Naved Syed, a member of Eblex’s halal steering group.

The issue is controversial, however, with some halal organisations reported to take a more pragmatic view and apparently agreeing to automated slaughter under certain conditions. It is also a delicate matter for enforcement authorities aware of the highly sensitive nature of religious slaughter.

While the meeting was happy with Food Standards Agency guidelines to local authority enforcement officers on halal food issues the scholars expressed concerns that correct practices were being ignored in many cases.

According to the guidelines slaughtermen must use a sharp knife to sever the jugular veins and carotid arteries as well as the oesophagus and trachea of animals, but not the spinal cord as this restricts convulsion, which in turn restricts the pumping out of blood.

However Syed said machine slaughter methods did result in the spinal cord being cut in 5 per cent of cases.

A survey last year showed that of 4.7 million birds slaughtered in one week using so-called halal procedures only 1.2 million used the correct manual method.

Mr Syed said: “If you are going to do halal you must do it properly.” He rejected a suggestion that following correct halal procedures was not practical on a modern, fast moving, poultry slaughterline, insisting that up to 8,000 birds an hour could be processed if four extra slaughtermen were employed."

He predicted that the rejection of automated slaughter methods by the scholars and the proper enforcement of halal manual methods would lead to legal challenges by some companies.

He added that although he organised the meeting he was not allowed to speak in the debate.

Masood Khawaji, president of the non profit authenticating body the Halal Food Authority, said mechanical slaughter methods have become necessary and some scholars and clerics are living in the past. “We have to look to the future,” he said.

Mechanised slaughter of poultry and animals under halal procedures should be permitted provided some criteria are met including ensuring that the animal
is not dead before slaughter and blood is drained from the body.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

mampukah pakatan rakyat ke putrajaya?

bena pakatan rakyat gak di kota bharu



Saturday, June 16, 2012

influenza viruses

The 1918 flu pandemic (the "Spanish flu") was an influenza pandemic, and the first of the two pandemics involving H1N1 influenza virus (the second was the 2009 flu pandemic, an outbreak of swine flu). It was an unusually severe and deadly pandemic that spread across the world. 
The pandemic lasted from June 1918 to December 1919,[3] spreading even to the Arctic and remote Pacific islands. Between 50 and 100 million died, making it one of the deadliest natural disasters in human history.




This is a common occurrence with influenza viruses: there is a tendency for pathogenic viruses to become less lethal with time, providing more living hosts.[10]

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Can Bird Flu-Resistant Chickens be Developed?










ANALYSIS - Could the answer to breeding a bird that is resistant to bird flu be drawing near? According to researchers at Roslin Institute at Edinburgh University in Scotland and Cambridge University, the day could be drawing near, writes Chris Harris.
The research in to genetically modifying chickens that did not pass on avian influenza was reported about two years ago.

But since that breakthrough, everything appears to have gone quiet on the research.

The original research developed genetically modified (transgenic) chickens that do not transmit avian influenza to other chickens with which they are in contact.

The genetic modification has the potential to stop bird flu outbreaks spreading within poultry flocks.

At the time, the scientists said that the breakthrough would not only protect the health of domestic poultry but could also reduce the risk of bird flu epidemics leading to new flu virus epidemics in the human population.

To produce these chickens, the Cambridge and Edinburgh scientists introduced a new gene that manufactures a small "decoy" molecule that mimics an important control element of the bird flu virus. The replication machinery of the virus is tricked into recognising the decoy molecule instead of the viral genome and this interferes with the replication cycle of the virus.

When the transgenic chickens were infected with avian flu, they became sick but did not transmit the infection on to other chickens kept in the same pen with them. This was the case even if the other chickens were normal (non-transgenic) birds.

The next steps in the research were expected to be the development of birds that not only did not pass on the virus but were also resistant.

However, the research hit funding problems and little has been heard on the matter since.

Now, the research team is hopeful of gaining new funding within the next few months that will enable them to carry on the research to develop birds that are resistant to avian flu H5N1.

Professor Helen Sang, from The Roslin Institute at the University of Edinburgh, said that her research colleagues at Cambridge, headed by Dr Laurence Tiley, had been developing transgenic models in the lab and the results of the trials with cells in culture had been encouraging.

"We have had some trials that look encouraging, but we won't know until we have carried out trials in birds," Professor Sang said.

She said that the research team is hoping for more funding to come through later this year and then the trials with birds can be started.

If the trials prove successful, the prospect of a commercialised avian flu resistant bird could have huge potential for the industry. However, the question of genetic modification always runs the risk of public rejection.

The outcry that has surrounded trials of GM crops in the UK in recent months, let alone the public uproar criticism that followed the news that products from genetically modified dairy cattle could have entered the food chain places big question marks over how a transgenic avian flu resistant chicken will be received.

When the initial research was published in 2010, the research team said that they felt that the public reaction would be positive and good.

The researchers said: "We believe the attitude of the UK public to GM food depends on the nature and purpose of the genetic modification. Disease resistance is clearly a beneficial characteristic for animal welfare and public health.

"The public's awareness of the global threat of influenza is high. We hope that examples that demonstrate clear consumer benefits with no inherent risk will encourage constructive debate about the potential of GM food in the future.

"Ultimately the British public will need to see how they benefit from eating genetically modified food, before they are likely to make the decision to do so."

Professor Sang said: "Using genetic modification to introduce genetic changes that cannot be achieved by animal breeding demonstrates the potential of GM to improve animal welfare in the poultry industry. This work could also form the basis for improving economic and food security in many regions of the world where bird flu is a significant problem."

And she told ThePoultrySite that she felt the public was prepared "to consider this an option" and felt the trials were well worthwhile continuing.

Certainly, if successful, this research could have dramatic benefits not only for the poultry industry but for other livestock sectors as the research team believes that the same techniques can be adapted for other species and other requirements and disease - but only if the public can be convinced first.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Rbw pilhan walet

Burung walet mempunyai 5 organ deria sama seperti manusia. Deria membolehkan burung walet mengesan perubahan alam sama ada untuk menarik atau menolak kesan alam sekitar terhadap fisiologi haiwan itu sendiri. Perubahan alam yang berlaku dikenali sebagai RANGSANGAN. Adakah anda tahu  5 jenis deria dan kepentingan rangsangan yang boleh kita manfaat untuk memikat burung walet  menginap dan berkembangbiak dalam Rbw pilihannya?.
Bagaimana anda manfaat deria dan rangsangan sudah tentu banyak bergantung kepada pengetahuan anda tentang animal science dan survival instinct dalam perladangan burung walet.   selamat mencuba

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Teknik memburu perlu di tingkat


Friday, June 8, 2012

No Bird Flu in Guangdong, Say Authorities


CHINA - Sources with the provincial department of agriculture said only one test sample collected from a duck in Jiangnan bazaar of meats and vegetables was suspected of being positive for the deadly H5 bird flu virus.
The samples were sent to the State's laboratory for further examination, according to a press release from Guangdong provincial department of agriculture.

"More than 40 samples collected from poultry in local meat and vegetable bazaars have been examined since the beginning of the month, and all the samples were negative," said the press release.

The Guangdong provincial department of agriculture has also issued a notice to relevant cities and departments, asking them to expand examination and stress sterilization work on local live poultry booths and bazaars to prevent the outbreak of bird flu in the province, which borders the Hong Kong and Macao special administrative regions.

The notice was issued after a 2-year-old boy who had visited a poultry bazaar in Guangzhou's Haizhu district tested positive for the deadly H5N1 strain of avian influenza in Hong Kong earlier this month.

The boy is still in hospital in Hong Kong, but all 22 contacts he had were examined and found to be negative for the H5N1 virus, according to sources with Guangdong provincial department of health.

In another development, He Jianfeng, director of Guangdong Provincial Institute of Infectious Disease Control and Prevention, said Guangdong is now experiencing a high incidence of flu. 

"The spread of flu has entered into the peak period in Guangdong, with many outbreaks having been reported in schools and kindergartens in previous months," Mr Jianfeng told local media.

And 92.2 per cent of the flu is type A, caused by H3N2 virus, while 7.8 per cent is type B, said Mr Jianfeng.

He predicted that the number of flu patients will continue to grow in the province in the coming months, reaching a peak in July.

And the cities of Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Foshan, Dongguan and Zhanjiang have been hardest hit, he said.

Guangdong has been on the warning list for flu, meaning that flu patients have made up more than 5 per cent of the province's total number of outpatients since March, he added.

Mr Jianfeng urged experts and doctors from Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macao to expand co-operation in preventing and curing the disease.

Luo Xuequn, a professor from the Paediatrics Department of Zhongshan No 1 Hospital affiliated to Sun Yatsen University, said the number of children coming to his hospital because of flu has doubled in the past two months.

"Paediatricians are seeing more than 500 children a day," he said.

Zhong Shijie, a doctor from Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicines, said the number of flu patients in his hospital has grown by 20 to 30 per cent since May.

"The hospital now has to cope with more than 3,000 flu patients a day, accounting for more than 15 per cent of outpatients," Dr Shijie said.

He added that the hospital has opened a special clinic to treat flu patients

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Lokasi terbaik, lokasi pilihan saya


Biasanya lokasi macam ni, tidak pernah menghampakan saya, kenapa ia dikatakan lokasi terbaik, apakah ciri2 lokasi terbaik?


wonderfull!! segala gala nampak sempurna sekali



10-year-old Cambodian girl dies from bird flu: WHO

PHNOM PENH: A 10-year-old Cambodian girl has died from bird flu, the World Health Organization (WHO) said Monday, the country's third fatality from the virulent disease this year.

The child developed a fever and shortness of breath on May 20 and died on Sunday, the WHO said in a joint statement with the Cambodian health ministry.

Hospital tests confirmed she had contracted the H5N1 strain of avian influenza.

"There is evidence of recent deaths among poultry in the village and the patient prepared sick chicken for food prior to becoming sick," the statement said.

The girl, from southwestern Kampong Speu province, is the 21st person in Cambodia to become infected with the H5N1 virus since 2003. Nineteen of those cases have been fatal.

The H5N1 strain has killed 357 people worldwide since 2003, according to WHO statistics.

Concerns about avian influenza have risen in the region with China, Vietnam and Indonesia all reporting deaths from the virus this year.

The virus typically spreads from birds to humans through direct contact, but experts fear it could mutate into a form easily transmissible between humans, with the potential to kill millions in a pandemic.