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

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

 

Fellowships and Awards

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

 

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

IN VITRO ACID EXPOSURE REPORT – AUGUST 2002.

Report
Cuddeford, D., Smith, D. & Stebbens, H. (2001)
IN VITRO ACID EXPOSURE REPORT – AUGUST 2002
In monogastic herbivores such as the horse, yeast based probiotics (YBP) feed additives must survive exposure to acid digestion in the stomach if they are to pass through to t...

FINAL REPORT – DECEMBER 2001: The effects of Biosaf Sc47 on the dry matter (DM), neutral detergent fibre (NDF) and acid detergent fibre (ADF) disappearance from four different forages using equine faecal inoculum in an in vitro system

Report
Cuddeford, D., Smith, D. & Stebbens, H. (2001)
FINAL REPORT – DECEMBER 2001: The effects of Biosaf Sc47 on the dry matter (DM), neutral detergent fibre (NDF) and acid detergent fibre (ADF) disappearance from four different forages using equine faecal inoculum in an in vitro system
The beneficial effects of feeding Biosaf Sc47 are well established in both ruminant and non-ruminant farm animals. In beef and dairy cattle, the addition of Biosaf Sc47 to th...

Evaluation of 3 techniques for determining diet composition.

Journal Article
Henley, S. R., Smith, D. & Raats, J. G. (2000)
Evaluation of 3 techniques for determining diet composition. Journal of range management. 54, 582-588. ISSN 0022-409X
Over a period of four days, three goats were employed to compare three techniques applied to the study of herbivore diet selection, namely direct observation, faecal analysis ...

Effect of species, plant part, and season of harvest on n-alkane concentrations in the cuticular wax of common rangeland grasses from southern Africa

Journal Article
Smith, D., Mayes, R. W. & Raats, J. G. (2000)
Effect of species, plant part, and season of harvest on n-alkane concentrations in the cuticular wax of common rangeland grasses from southern Africa. Australian journal of agricultural research. 52, 875-882. doi:10.1071/AR00032. ISSN 0004-9409
The use of plant alkane concentrations to measure diet composition of herbivores has been shown to be a reliable technique in animals grazing temperate, sown pastures that con...

Alleviating poverty in peri-urban Ethiopia by improving the health, welfare and management of donkeys: "Promoting peri-urban livelihoods through better donkey welfare".

Presentation / Conference
Smith, D., Agajie, T., & More, L. (2000, January)
Alleviating poverty in peri-urban Ethiopia by improving the health, welfare and management of donkeys: "Promoting peri-urban livelihoods through better donkey welfare"
Proceedings of a workshop held at Debre Zeit, Ethiopia. October 2000

Assessment of health conditions of donkeys kept in urban and rural areas of central Ethiopia.

Book
Gemechu, K., Aster, Y., Tamirat, D., & Pearson, R. A. (1999)
Assessment of health conditions of donkeys kept in urban and rural areas of central Ethiopia. In D. Smith, T. Agajie, & L. More (Eds.), Alleviating poverty in Peri-urban Ethiopia by improving the health, welfare and management of donkeys. Promoting peri-urban livelihoods through better donkey welfare. Proceedings of a workshop held at Debre Zeit, Ethiopia, October 2000, 29-35. Ethiopa: CTVM

R7376: A practical decision support tool to improve the feedmanagement of ruminant work animals. Final Technical Report

Report
Thorne, P. J. & Smith, D. (1999)
R7376: A practical decision support tool to improve the feedmanagement of ruminant work animals. Final Technical Report
Deteriorating levels of food production and increasing demands for food have reduced food security amongst rural communities in poor countries. Draught animal technology can h...

The effects of work on food intake and ingestive behaviour of draught cattle and buffalo given barley straw

Journal Article
Pearson, R. A., & Smith, D. (1994)
The effects of work on food intake and ingestive behaviour of draught cattle and buffalo given barley straw. Animal production, 58(03), 339-346. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003356100007273
In the first experiment draught cattle and buffalo were worked for 5 h/day and/or given 17 h access to feed. In the second experiment they were worked for 4 h/day and/or given...

Changes in food intake and ingestive behaviour of draught cattle and buffalo associated with work.

Conference Proceeding
Smith, D., Pearson, R. A., & Campbell, I. (1993)
Changes in food intake and ingestive behaviour of draught cattle and buffalo associated with work

Avaliação do padrão circadiano das atividades de alimentação e ruminação de bovinos no pantanal pelo uso de aparelho registrador eletrônico portátil

Conference Proceeding
Santos, S. A., Smith, D. & Costa, C. (2000)
Avaliação do padrão circadiano das atividades de alimentação e ruminação de bovinos no pantanal pelo uso de aparelho registrador eletrônico portátil. In 38a Reuni, 2-6

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