New Zealand Society of Animal Production explained

New Zealand Society of Animal Production
Formation:1941
Membership:418 (in 2015)
Leader Title:President
Key People:John Ranstead (first president)
Website:http://nzsap.org/

The New Zealand Society of Animal Production (NZSAP) aims to foster research in all areas of animal production.

History

The society was founded in 1941 by a group of 66 scientists.[1] The aims, which as of 2015 were unchanged, were stated as:

Activities

The society holds an annual conference, publishes the journal Proceedings of the New Zealand Society for Animal Production, awards grants, and confers awards. Awards include Life Membership of the society, the McMeekan Memorial Award (in honour of Mac McMeekan), the Sir Arthur Ward Award, a Living Legend Award, a Young Member Award, the Landcorp Farming Lecture, the NZSAP Innovation Award, the Jubilee University Award and the Lincoln University Centennial Award.[3]

Office holders

The first president of the society was John Ranstead. In 2004 the president was Catherine Morrow, and in 2007 it was David Scobie.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About us NZSAP. 12 November 2021. nzsap.org.
  2. Nicol. AM. 2015. New Zealand Society of Animal Production – The Past 25 Years. Proceedings of the New Zealand Society of Animal Production. Dunedin. 75. 150–153.
  3. Web site: Grants and Awards NZSAP. 12 November 2021. nzsap.org.