David Smith
David Smith

Dr David Smith SFHEA, MRSB

Lecturer

Biography

I graduated from UCW Aberystwyth in 1985 with a degree in Agriculture. Following graduation I went on to work with the National Pig Development Company, specialising in the selection and evaluation of animals for the hybrid breeding market. After two years working in industry I completed a Certificate in Education at Wolverhampton Polytechnic in 1988. I was then recruited by the British Council to teach agriculture to secondary school students in the Kalahari Region of Botswana. It was during this experience that I discovered my passion for teaching practical subjects, and was instrumental in developing the learning facilities of the school. These included extensive garden development, biogas generation facilities and livestock housing. After leaving Botswana, I worked in several Further Education Colleges of Agriculture in the UK, before coning to Edinburgh in 1991 to study for an MSc in Tropical Animal Production and Health at the Centre for Tropical Veterinary Medicine (CTVM). Graduating with a distinction in this subject, I was retained as a research associate at the CTVM. I worked here for the next twelve years carrying out research into improving the health and welfare of working animals in Africa and South America. I joined Aberdeen University as a teaching fellow in 2003, where I taught livestock science to undergraduates and supervised several research degrees. I joined Edinburgh Napier University in 2007, where I was mainly involved with the development of the veterinary nursing degree programme. I am now programme leader for Biological Sciences in the School of Applied Sciences at Edinburgh Napier,

Research Areas

Esteem

Advisory panels and expert committees or witness

  • Quality Assurance Agency, Higher Education subject benchmarks for veterinary nursing

 

External Examining/Validations

  • Chief Examiner: Animal based industires, Hartpury Unversity College
  • External programme reviewer: Veterinary Nursing, University of Glasgow
  • External Examiner in Veterinary Nursing, Nottingham Trent University
  • External programme reviewer: Land based subjects (SRUC)

 

Fellowships and Awards

  • Royal Society Visiting Fellow: Fort Hare University, South Africa
  • Honary Fellow: University of Zimbabwe
  • Honary Fellow: Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies

 

Invited Speaker

  • Veterinary Nurse training in the UK, Kerala Veterinary Science Congress
  • Key ingredients in the integration of crop and livestock systems of Africa, Food and Agriculture Organisation

 

Non-executive Directorship

  • Financial Director: Tropical Resource Consultants

 

Research Degree External Examining

  • External Examiner, University of Reading
  • External Examiner: University Autonomía Estado México

 

Date


60 results

Book review - Reptilian Incubation. Environment, Evolution and Behaviour

Journal Article
Smith, D. (2006)
Book review - Reptilian Incubation. Environment, Evolution and Behaviour. Biologist, 53, 151
Both professional and amateur herpetologists will find Reptile Incubation: Environment, Evolution and Behaviour a fascinating read. The book provides detailed academic discus...

Book review - "Nutritional physiology of the horse" - Ellis, Andrea D., HIll, Julian

Journal Article
Smith, D. (2006)
Book review - "Nutritional physiology of the horse" - Ellis, Andrea D., HIll, Julian. Biologist, 53, 202
There has been a considerable advance in our knowledge of equine nutritional physiology over the past two decades, as techniques originally developed for ruminant research hav...

Validating the alkane pair technique to estimate dry matter intake in equids.

Journal Article
Smith, D., Mayes, R. W., Hollands, T., Cuddeford, D., Yule, H. H., Ladrero, C. M. M. & Gillen, E. (2006)
Validating the alkane pair technique to estimate dry matter intake in equids. Journal of Agricultural Science. 145, 273-281. doi:10.1017/S0021859607006788. ISSN 0021-8596
The estimation of dry matter intake (DMI) using the alkane pair technique has been validated in ruminants, but not in equids. The current paper reports the finding of three co...

Episode 30 - Dog intelligence.

Digital Artefact
Smith, D. (2006)
Episode 30 - Dog intelligence.
Are you a fan of pedigrees or do you prefer crossbreeds? Opinions on this area can be very heartfelt, and the issue is clouded in myth. Which is more intelligent though, a pur...

Uni takes lead in dog IQ testing.

Digital Artefact
Smith, D. (2006)
Uni takes lead in dog IQ testing. [BBC News channel]
Scottish scientists are trying to prove intelligence is not just down to good breeding - at least for dogs. Aberdeen University is running IQ tests on pedigree and crossbreed...

Key ingredients in the integration of crop and livestock systems of Africa.

Conference Proceeding
Smith, D. (2005)
Key ingredients in the integration of crop and livestock systems of Africa

Seasonal variation of digestible energy requirements of mature donkeys in the UK.

Journal Article
Wood, S. J., Smith, D., & Morris, C. J. (2005)
Seasonal variation of digestible energy requirements of mature donkeys in the UK. Pferdeheilkunde, 21, 39-40
This study was conducted between May 2003 and July 2004 at The Donkey Sanctuary, Sidmouth, Devon, UK. Two recording periods took place; the first between June and August 2003 ...

The effect of providing feed supplementation and anthelmintic to donkeys during late pregnancy and lactation on live weight and survival of dams and their foals in Central Ethiopia

Journal Article
Mengistu, A., Smith, D., Yoseph, S., Nega, T., Zewdie, W., Kassahun, W. G., …Firew, T. (2005)
The effect of providing feed supplementation and anthelmintic to donkeys during late pregnancy and lactation on live weight and survival of dams and their foals in Central Ethiopia. Tropical Animal Health and Production, 37(S1), 21-33. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11250-005-9003-4
Anthelmintic treatment (A), feed supplementation (F), anthelmintic and feed supplementation (A+F) or traditional management (Control) was given to 166 pregnant female donkeys ...

Book Review: Drought, livestock losses and the potential for feed production from arable land in Afghanistan: A case study of 183 villages with mixed crop/livestock farming systems.

Journal Article
Smith, D. (2004)
Drought, livestock losses and the potential for feed production from arable land in Afghanistan: A case study of 183 villages with mixed crop/livestock farming systems. Tropical Animal Health and Production, 36, 566. https://doi.org/10.1023/B%3ATROP.0000041126.04636.09
Of all the problems that Afghanistan has faced during the last twenty years, perhaps the least well known is the regular occurrence of drought. As frequently as four years in...

Participatory study on feeding strategies for working donkeys used by campesino farmers in the highlands of Central MǸxico

Journal Article
Colunga, G. B., Arriaga-Jordǭn, C. M., Velǭquez Beltran, L., Gonzǭlez-Ronquillo, M., Smith, D., Estrada-Flores, J., …Castelǭn-Ortega, O. A. (2004)
Participatory study on feeding strategies for working donkeys used by campesino farmers in the highlands of Central MǸxico. Tropical Animal Health and Production. 37, 143-157. doi:10.1007/s11250-005-9013-2. ISSN 0049-4747
The aim of this work was to describe the feeding strategies for donkeys used by peasant farmers in central MǸxico. Feeding strategies for the dry and wet seasons are described...

Previous Post Grad projects

Non-Napier PhD or MSc by Research supervisions

  • Use of n-alkanes for estimation of voluntary intake and digestibility in donkeys ( Equus asinus ), University Autonomía Estado México
  • Some factors affecting the DE requirements and DMI of donkeys, University of Edinburgh