Glossy Black-Cockatoos taking off
Lathami conservation park_1
Lathami conservation park_2
Christmas Cove cottage_1
Christmas Cove cottage_1
Rocky beach, Hog Bay
These glossy black-cockatoos held still
Willoughby Road
Lashmar Conservation Park
Chapman River through the tea-trees
Chapman River_1
Chapman River_2
Willoughby Road with Cape Willoughby lighthouse
Butterfly
obvious street sign
Hahndorf Academy
House in Hahndorf_1
House in Hahndorf_2
Hahndorf - view from Academy
House in Hahndorf_3
Bridgewater mill
Bridgewater mill
Liebelt Homestead
Kangaroo Island Feral pig, mixed with domestic pig…
keeping in each other's shadow
African Fat-Rumped sheep
South African Fat-tailed sheep
Paddocks with sea view
Cornish Black pig
Wessex Saddleback pig
darkening clouds, Stokes Bay Road_2
darkening clouds, Stokes Bay Road_1
Find the Hooded Plover
Sea star
Emu Bay ripples
White Lagoon salt lake_3
White Lagoon salt lake_1
White Lagoon salt lake with cray pots in the foreg…
White Lagoon salt lake_1
Bay of Shoals
Pelicans taking off
Pelican occupying streetlamp
American River at dusk_5
American River at dusk_4
American River at dusk_3
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Kangaroo Island Feral pig, pure, sow
As opposed to most other feral pigs who have become pests in Australia, the Kangaroo Island Feral pig has both a fascinating history and a huge potential in transplantation medicine:
The French explorer, Nicholas Baudin, released a breeding pair of pigs at what is now called Hog Bay, or as he called it, Anse des. Sources, on Kangaroo Island in 1803. From this one pair, a highlyu inbred population of feral pigs has developed. While some of those have mixed with domestic pigs bred on tthe island, others have kept their bloodline so pure and their gene-pool so small that they have become of major interest for biological and medical research: A small herd of Kangaroo Island feral pigs, further inbred in lab conditions, the Westran, developed by Westmead Hospital and the Veterinary Faculty of the University of Sydney, has become relevant for research in xenotransplantation and might help avoid the problem of tissue rejection of donor organs in transplants soon.
cf. www.publish.csiro.au/paper/EA05063.htm
Rare Breeds Farm, Stokes Bay:
www.postcards.sa.com.au/features/rare_breeds_farm.html
The French explorer, Nicholas Baudin, released a breeding pair of pigs at what is now called Hog Bay, or as he called it, Anse des. Sources, on Kangaroo Island in 1803. From this one pair, a highlyu inbred population of feral pigs has developed. While some of those have mixed with domestic pigs bred on tthe island, others have kept their bloodline so pure and their gene-pool so small that they have become of major interest for biological and medical research: A small herd of Kangaroo Island feral pigs, further inbred in lab conditions, the Westran, developed by Westmead Hospital and the Veterinary Faculty of the University of Sydney, has become relevant for research in xenotransplantation and might help avoid the problem of tissue rejection of donor organs in transplants soon.
cf. www.publish.csiro.au/paper/EA05063.htm
Rare Breeds Farm, Stokes Bay:
www.postcards.sa.com.au/features/rare_breeds_farm.html
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