AVS: Business

B.S. Animal and Veterinary Science: Business Option

» Department of Animal and Veterinary Science   » College of Agricultural and Life Sciences


  • INTRODUCTION
  • WHAT IT TAKES
  • WHAT PEOPLE DO
  • GET INVOLVED
  • FACULTY
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Balance courses in accounting, economics, communications, business management and marketing with courses in animal and meat sciences.

A Bachelor of Science in Animal and Veterinary Science Business Option from the University of Idaho prepares you to make important business management decisions about animal production.

Emerging niche markets and concerns for environmental sustainability create opportunities for exciting new products and business practices in the livestock industry.


Get hands-on animal experience in on-campus labs and animal centers. Learn how to maximize the value of retail cuts at the meat science laboratory. Explore pregnancy rates and grazing management systems at our beef and sheep centers.

In your senior year, you will integrate lessons from business and animal science. You might determine the efficiency of a cow-calf operation, examine how horses are bred and sold, or develop a plan for marketing a swine vaccine.

You’ll learn from teachers involved in today’s most pressing issues in animal and veterinary science.


Students are encouraged to complete an internship the summer between their junior and senior year. They work for farms of all sizes and other businesses in the food industry.


Prepare for Success

This major is a good fit if you can see yourself:

  • Working for businesses that rely on domestic animals such as cattle, sheep and horses.
  • Making decisions about budgets, production levels and marketing strategies in animal agriculture.
  • Using communication and leadership skills to work in teams that may include accountants, veterinarians, environmental scientists and engineers.


To prepare, you may want to:

  • Participate in 4-H activities, volunteer at a county fair or work for a farm.
  • Practice your leadership skills in student office.
  • Pay attention to current issues in the news related to animals and agriculture.


Your First Year

Your first year, you will hone your communication skills with course work in writing. You will also take the science of animal husbandry, an animal husbandry lab, and an orientation to animal and veterinary science.

More advanced major courses include farm and agribusiness management, feed and ration formulation, animal reproduction and breeding, and agricultural economics.

See the four-year plan.


What You Can Do

With this degree, you may become one of the following:

  • Production manager: Manage the production processes of a dairy, meat processing firm, or feedlot.
  • Business owner: Direct all operations of a farm, ranch or other agribusiness.
  • Sales representative: Sell veterinary supplies and medicine for a pharmaceutical or animal products company.
  • Marketing director: Make decisions about marketing strategies and advertising for a ranch or farm cooperative, pharmaceutical or equipment manufacturer or a food processing company.
  • Analyst: Gather and interpret data about the livestock industry to promote the interests of a state or national organization and support its lobbying efforts.


Opportunities

Almost all of our graduates receive job offers upon graduation with starting salaries of up to $50,000.  They work in businesses, governmental agencies and nonprofit organizations.

You may also want to continue your education. Pursue an advanced degree in business, law, nutrition, genetics and breeding, reproductive physiology or other specialized fields.


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Current Research

Our faculty members conduct research concurrently with teaching, exploring such topics such as reproduction, growth and lactation physiology; meat and dairy science and nutrition; and aquaculture.

Research opportunities are plentiful. Collect and analyze feed samples in beef, dairy and sheep nutrition laboratories. Analyze the hormone composition of blood in the bovine or equine reproductive physiology labs. Evaluate alternative uses of waste products from a meat processing facility. Care for animals at the beef, dairy and sheep centers. Paid positions are available.


Activities

National Agricultural Marketing Association: Join the student chapter and attend national meetings.
Agribusiness Club: Meet business leaders and potential employers
Student Idaho Cattle Association, Livestock and Meats Judging Teams, Block and Bridle: Visit farms and ranches. Practice judging and showing livestock.


Hands-On Experience

Intern. Get real-world experiences likes these:

  • Nancy M. Cummings Research, Extension and Education Center: Help feed and care for 400 crossbred mother cows at the University of Idaho’s ranch near Salmon, Idaho.
  • Idaho Beef Council: Work on promotion and marketing for the beef industry.
  • Livestock Marketing Information Center: Apply new decision making tools to determine how to successfully introduce products into the market.
Study abroad. Deepen your understanding of your major—and the world—in countries like these:
  • Mexico: Visit family operated ranches.
  • Taiwan: Tour food production facilities.
  • Australia: Visit a country that prizes its beef industry.


Facilities

Facilities you will have access to include:

  • Beef center with purebred cows
  • Dairy center with milking Holsteins
  • Sheep center with breeding Suffolk ewes
  • Reproductive physiology labs
  • Agriculture-biotech labs
  • On-campus processing facilities for meat and dairy



Ahmadzadeh, Amin
Amin Ahmadzadeh, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
My research is in the area of applied cattle reproduction with an emphasis on fertility and nutrition. The focus of my research is to develop a systematic breeding program for dairy cattle to increase fertility rates and improve reproductive and economic advantages of artificial insemination (AI) on dairy farms.
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Benton Glaze
Benton Glaze, Ph.D.
Beef Extension Specialist & Associate Professor
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Carl Hunt
Carl Hunt, Ph.D.
Department Head & Professor
Research interests: Methods which will improve the energy status of ruminants.
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UI faculty member Christopher Schneider
Christopher Schneider, DVM
Assistant Professor
Clinical Expertise & Interest: Dairy management and production animal medicine, Computer records analysis and system implementation, Bovine theriogenology, Embryo transfer and sex determination, In vitro production of mammalian embryos
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Dirk Vanderwall
Dirk Vanderwall, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Research interests: Basic and applied aspects of gamete physiology and endocrinology in horses.
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Gordon Murdoch
Gordon Murdoch, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
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James England
James England, Ph.D.
Professor
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Jason Ahola
Jason Ahola, Ph.D.
Beef Extension Specialist & Assistant Professor
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Grant Hall
John Hall
Superintendent of the Nancy M. Cummings Center
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Joseph Dalton
Joseph Dalton, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
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Marie Bulgin
Marie Bulgin
Caine Veterinary Teaching Center Teaching Program Coordinator & Professor
Research interests: Sheep disease
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McGuire, Mark
Mark McGuire, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Research interests: Lactation in cows and women; dairy nutrition; human nutrition; milk synthesis; milk fat synthesis; milk protein synthesis; role of dairy products in the human diet; mastitis; functional genomics of lactation
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Matthew Doumit
Matt Doumit
Associate Professor
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Professor Powell
Matt Powell, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Research interests: Genetic variation among individuals and populations to explore artificial selection; evolutionary consequences of drift, natural selection and hybridization
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Chahine, Mireille
Mireille Chahine
Extension Dairy Specialist & Assistant Professor
Areas of expertise: Milk quality, personnel training and management (Spanish & English), dairy production management, dairy cow nutrition, milking management
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Richard Battaglia, Professor of Animal Veterinary Science
Richard Battaglia, Ph.D.
Professor
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Richard Norel
Rick Norell, Ph.D.
Extension Professor
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Hill
Rod Hill, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Research interests: Identification and understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying muscle and adipose tissue growth and differentiation, and their manipulation to improve production efficiency.
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Hardy
Ronald Hardy, Ph.D.
Director, Aquaculture Research Institute & Professor
Research interests: Fish nutrition and feeds; alternative feed ingredients for fish meal and fish oil for use in salmon and trout feeds; molecular genetics in relation to somatic growth, nutrient partitioning, and effects of diet on immune functionornamental fish production using geothermal water resources in Idaho
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Ron Richard
Ronald Richard
Meat Lab Manager & Instructor
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Tracy Davis
Tracy Davis, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
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Headshot of Mr Ayers
M. Wayne Ayers, DVM
Assistant Professor
Research interests: Testing for Johne's disease in sheep and goats; bovine nutrition; reproduction; effects of drought on bovine performance; passive transfer of colostral immunity
» Email Wayne Ayers