Skip to content
Penn State University Libraries

Animal Science

 

Contact

Helen Smith
Title: Agricultural Sciences Librarian


phone: 814-865-3706
Life Sciences Library
408 Paterno Library  

 


See Also

Articles and Databases

Core Resources...

  • CAB Abstracts for animal nutrition, animal breeding, poultry science, and veterinary sciences.
  • PubMed (Medline) for all aspects of biomedicine.
  • Biological Abstracts for all of biology. Especially strong in microbiology.
  • Animal  Health & Production Compendium an encyclopedic, mixed-media, one-stop shop for information on animal diseases, their pathogens and vectors, as well as animal husbandry, genetics and nutrition of livestock and poultry species and breeds

Also of Interest...

Don't forget: Try These First if you want general popular interest magazines and newspapers or pro and con debate information

Do we have that E-Journal?

Search for Penn State E-journals by title, keyword or ISSN.

Article Search Tips

Finding the best articles on your topic requires a number of steps.

  • Select an appropriate database.
  • Enter and combine terms appropriate to your topic
  • Look at the best references you retrieve and determine the subject terms used for those articles. Then revise your search using these new terms.
  • Save, write down or print off all pertinent information (called the 'citation') including the journal title, volume, date, and page numbers.
  • Explore other databases and subject terms (which vary between databases) for more information.

Get the full text

Once you find the citation, try the Penn State Get It Button button to see if Penn State has the electronic or print version of the article you need. If the electronic version is available, it will appear as the first link on the Get it! menu. If the article is not available electronically, click on The CAT link to automatically search our catalog and see if Penn State has a print copy. If no other copy is available, you use the InterLibrary Loan link to request it from another library.

Books

Books at Penn State

Use The CAT for finding books owned by Penn State.

CAT Search Tips:  The CAT is the list of what is owned by Penn State Libraries.

Go to the Browse function if you are looking for a specific title or author (type last name first).

Go to the Keyword function and combine terms to search on a topic then use the subject headings from relevant books for additional search terms.

Write down the call number and location for any book you want.

For electronic books, click the words "online content" to access the full text.

Quick Guide to Searching the CAT (HTML version) or Quick Guide to Searching in the CAT(easy-print PDF version).

Learn how to refine your search with Savvy Searching in the CAT (html) or easy-print PDF version: Savvy Searching in the CAT.

Suggested CAT Search Terms: Try searching for specific animals (i.e. poultry or dairy cattle), diseases (i.e. marek's disease or encephalopathy) or concepts (i.e. reproduction or nutrition).

Call Numbers: At University Park, most materials in the life sciences are located on the 4th floor of Paterno Library. General call numbers and subject areas are:

  • QL - Zoology
  • QP - Physiology
  • QR - Microbiology
  • SF95-SF99 - Animal Nutrition
  • SF191-SF219 - Cattle
  • SF221-SF275 - Dairying and Dairy Products
  • SF277-SF359 - Horses
  • SF371-SF379 - Sheep
  • SF391-SF397 - Swine
  • SF421-SF440 - Dogs
  • SF441-SF449 - Cats
  • SF481-SF507 - Poultry
  • SF600-SF998 - Veterinary Medicine

 

Libraries Borrowing Policies

Once you have the books, check them out at the nearest lending desk or self check-out station. Loan periods are usually four weeks but books can be recalled for another user, so respond promptly to library notices. For more information see the University Libraries Lending Code. 

Books Elsewhere

If Penn State doesn't own the book you need, try WorldCat to identify it, and then use the InterLibrary Loan link to request it from another library.

Reference Material

 

Encyclopedias & Dictionaries

 

Diseases & Nutrition

  • Consultant is a diagnostic support system for veterinary medicine from Cornell University. You can search by sign or diagnosis and limit retrieval to a specific species.
  • Merck Veterinary Manual although the online version is not the most current, this is a classic handbook for veterinarians on the diagnosis and treatment of diseases in all animals. It is also available in print.
  • Poisonous plant information can be found at the Plants Toxic to Animals page from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Veterinary Medical Library or the Cornell University Poisonous Plants Web Page.
  • The nutrient requirements of domestic animals can be found in a series of books available in the library.
 

Animal Welfare

  • Animal Welfare Information Center from the National Agricultural Library provides access to a wealth information in their online publications
  • Altweb -- Project of the Center for Alternatives to Animal Testing contains news about alternatives and animal research; an archive of important journals, books, and articles; links to related Web sites around the world.
  • The Animal Agriculture Alliance serves as the national umbrella organization through which feed, animal health, livestock, poultry groups and others with a vested interest in animal agriculture develop and deliver consistent messages to consumers.
  • AnimalConcerns.org The online community for people concerned about the welfare and rights of animals. This site includes job listings, email discussion list information, news stories, a calendar of events, and basic animal rights information.
  • Yahoo has a subject based list of pointers to animal rights, endangered species, and vegetarian web sites.
 

Associations

 

Internet Guides

If you are just looking for information in a general topic area, a subject guide is more appropriate than searching Google.

Research Tips

Evaluating Resources for Content

To evaluate print sources and web sites, you should ask a series of questions concerning the source’s currency, authority, validity, intended audience and bias. See this How to Evaluate Information site for details.

Citing Your Sources

Plagiarism, whether you copy a paragraph from a book or cut and paste someone else's words from an e-mail, is a violation of Penn State's academic integrity policy. See this Definition of Plagiarism and Academic Integrity in Penn State's Plagiarism Tutorials.

When using information from another source you must give credit to the original author or you are plagiarizing. You give credit by citing the source. Make sure your citation contains everything you would need to backtrack and find the information again. It is best to pick one citation style and be consistent. Check our Citation and Writing Guides page for more details.

You may want to use the citation style used by the Journal of Animal Sciences, or the CSE style since it is often used in the sciences.

Manage your personal research library

When working on extensive research projects, you will need to collect, organize and format all those citations!

The following tools are appropriate to use at Penn State.  They all allow you to store and search for your references, as well as create in-text citations and bibliographies. 

  • Zotero is a free Firefox plug-in that allows for easy capturing of citation information from web pages.
  • Mendeley is a free tool for both the desktop and web that integrates with Zotero and easily manages PDFs.
  • EndNote is a citation manager that you must purchase and download onto your personal computer.


See also this comparison chart of these products.