4-H

Authors
Jeremy Elliott-Engel
Publication Date: April 2020 | Publication Number: AZ1822-2020 | View PDF

The University of Arizona Cooperative Extension (UACE) 4-H Youth Development Club Chartering and Financial Management Guide is an abbreviated set of rules, guidelines, and implementation procedures for 4-H volunteers to utilize to successfully manage clubs and resources in the University of Arizona Cooperative Extension 4-H youth development program.

Authors
Jeremy Elliott-Engel
Publication Date: April 2020 | Publication Number: AZ1821-2020 | View PDF

The University of Arizona Cooperative Extension (UACE) 4-H Youth Development Family Guide is an abbreviated set of rules and guidelines, designed to help families participate successfully in the University of Arizona Cooperative Extension 4-H youth development program.

Authors
Jeremy Elliott-Engel
Publication Date: April 2020 | Publication Number: AZ1820-2020 | View PDF

The University of Arizona Cooperative Extension (UACE) 4-H Youth Development Volunteer and Risk Management Guide is an abbreviated set of rules, guidelines, and implementation procedures for 4-H volunteers to utilize as they provide leadership for their 4-H clubs and programming for the University of Arizona Cooperative Extension 4-H youth development program.

Authors
Peter Hooper
Publication Date: July 2020 | View PDF

Until recently, there have been few serious diseases affecting domestic or pet rabbits in the United States. For the first time ever cases of Rabbit Hemorrhagic Disease (sometimes abbreviated RHD or RHDV) have surfaced in wild rabbit populations in North America. This disease is caused by a highly contagious calicivirus that affects rabbits and hares (lagomorphs) and causes serious disease and death. This virus and the disease it causes has been around for many years; it was first identified in China in 1984. It soon spread into Europe where it caused significant fatalities in the European wild and domestic rabbit populations. Humans inadvertently introduced the disease to Australia and New Zealand in the early 1990s, when they were trying to develop a tool to control RHDV in wild (and invasive) rabbit populations in those countries.