Analyze Diet

Topic:Animal Science

Animal Science and horses encompass the study of equine biology, physiology, and management practices aimed at understanding and improving horse health, welfare, and performance. This field integrates various scientific disciplines, including genetics, nutrition, reproduction, and behavior, to address the needs of horses in diverse contexts such as sports, work, and companionship. Research in this area often focuses on optimizing feeding strategies, enhancing breeding programs, and developing effective health management protocols. Additionally, studies explore the genetic factors influencing traits such as athleticism and disease resistance, as well as the impact of environmental and management conditions on horse behavior and welfare. This page gathers peer-reviewed research and scholarly articles that investigate the scientific principles underpinning equine science and their practical applications in horse care and management.
The activity of some nucleolytic enzymes in semen and in the secretion of the male reproductive tract.
Andrologia    January 1, 1977   Volume 9, Issue 1 15-22 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0272.1977.tb01252.x
Mennella MR, Jones MR.The activity of 5'-nucleotidase (EC 1.3.5), cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (EC 2.1.4.17), non-specific phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.1) and ribonuclease (EC 1.7.7.16)has been investigated in the seminal plasma of whole semen and in the secretions of the seminal vesicle, prostate and epididymis of the bull, boar, ram, stallion, jackass, rabbit and man. Bull seminal plasma showed the highest activity for 5'-nucleotidase, cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase and ribonuclease; in contrast, stallion and jackass semen were very poor in these enzymes. Ram, rabbit and boar seminal plasma showed inte...
Comparative studies on the gastric glycopeptide in eleven animal species.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1977   Volume 58, Issue 2 163-165 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(77)90103-1
Masuda H, Shichijo S, Takeuchi M.1. Glycopeptides in the stomachs of eleven mammalian species, including human, rabbit, horse, cow, pig, goat, sheep, dog, cat, guinea pig and rat were assayed by determining the carbohydrate content of materials which remained after proteolysis. 2. The glycopeptide content was higher in the mucosa than in the muscular layer including serosa, especially in the porcine stomach and the fourth stomachs of the ruminants than in the stomachs of any other animals. 3. The glycopeptide, which was stained with both alcian blue and PAS, was absent or sparingly present in the mucosae of the human, rabbit,...
Proton-dependent dissociation equilibrium of hemoglobin. 1. A 700-nanometer light-scattering study on horse methemoglobin in the pH range 4.8 to 7.2.
Biochemistry    December 28, 1976   Volume 15, Issue 26 5693-5697 doi: 10.1021/bi00671a002
Schroeder E, Wollmer A, Kubicki J, Ohlenbusch HD.The effect of proton concentration upon the subunit dissociation of horse methemoglobin has been investigated at two ionic strengths by light scattering photometry at 700 nm. Differential refractometry revealed a slight but systematic decrease of the specific refractive index increment with decreasing protein concentration for solutions in dialytic equilibrium with the solvent. In the pH range 4.8-7.2 the dissociation can be described by a simple equilibrium between tetramers and dimers. The dissociation constant Kd of the met derivative is found to be very similar to those of the O2- and CO-l...
Animal disease agents transmitted by horse flies and deer flies (Diptera: Tabanidae).
Journal of medical entomology    December 8, 1976   Volume 13, Issue 3 225-275 doi: 10.1093/jmedent/13.3.225
Krinsky WL.No abstract available
[Prevention of abortion and premature labor in cattle and horses].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 5, 1976   Volume 83, Issue 12 554-556 
Vandeplassche M, Coryn M, Spincemaille J, Bouters R, Bonte P.No abstract available
Pregnant mare serum gonadotrophin: ratio of follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone activities measured by radioreceptor assay.
The Journal of endocrinology    December 1, 1976   Volume 71, Issue 3 471-482 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.0710371
Stewart F, Allen WR, Moor RM.Specific radioreceptor assays for FSH and LH, which employ tissue receptors from rat testis and highly purified human FSH (LER 1575-C) and LH (Hartree IRC-2, 24/6/69) as standards, have been developed to determine the FSH-like and LH-like activities in pregnant mare serum gonadotropin (PMSG). Measurements of FSH and LH concentrations in the serum of six pregnant Pony mares showed that the ratio of these two activities did not vary significantly between mares and remained constant between days 40 and 80 of gestation with a value of 1-45 +/- 0-04 (S.E.M.). The FSH:LH ratio of PMSG produced by cu...
Iran’s Caspian horse.
Modern veterinary practice    December 1, 1976   Volume 57, Issue 12 1027-1029 
Carroll RE.No abstract available
Ventilatory control in peripheral chemoreceptor-denervated ponies during chronic hypoxemia.
Journal of applied physiology    December 1, 1976   Volume 41, Issue 6 878-885 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1976.41.6.878
Forster HV, Bisgard GE, Rasmussen B, Orr JA, Buss DD, Manohar M.The present study was designed to provide further insight into the role of the carotid and aortic chemoreceptors in ventilatory (VE) acclimatization during sojourn at altitude. Measurements were made: 1) on 10 ponies near sea level (SL, 740 Torr) under normal conditions, 2) on 6 of these at SL following chemoreceptor denervation (CD), and 3) subsequently on all 10 during 4 days of hypobaric hypoxia (PaO2 = 40-47 Torr). CD resulteo in hypoventilation at SL (deltaPaCO2 = d8 Torr, P less than 0.05), and it prevented hyperventilation normally observed with injection of NaCN and acute exposure to h...
A radioimmunoassay for equilin in equine pregnancy plasma.
FEBS letters    November 15, 1976   Volume 72, Issue 1 18-20 doi: 10.1016/0014-5793(76)80888-5
Park BK, Rance TA, Dean PD.No abstract available
Haematological values in Nigerian part-arab stallions.
The Veterinary record    November 13, 1976   Volume 99, Issue 20 397-398 doi: 10.1136/vr.99.20.397
Saror DI.No abstract available
Synchronous diaphragmatic flutter in horses.
The Veterinary record    November 13, 1976   Volume 99, Issue 20 402 doi: 10.1136/vr.99.20.402
No abstract available
Lungworm infection (Dictyocaulus arnfieldi) of horses and donkeys.
The Veterinary record    November 13, 1976   Volume 99, Issue 20 393-395 doi: 10.1136/vr.99.20.393
Round MC.Dictyocaulus arnfieldi (Cobbold 1884) infects the respiratory tract of horses, donkeys, mules, hinnies and zebra. A review of the literature has been given by Round (1972). In the western hemisphere it is popularly believed that donkeys are the natural host and that horses become infected by association with infected donkeys. There is scant documentary evidence for this and, in the Soviet Union, patent infections may reach 70 per cent without mention of donkey association (Koulikov 1935, Borovkova 1948, Akramovskii 1952a). Poynter (1963) considered the infection to be rare in the United Kingdo...
Oldest horse brains: more advanced than previously realized.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    November 5, 1976   Volume 194, Issue 4265 626-627 doi: 10.1126/science.790567
Radinsky L.Previous interpretations of early horse brains were based on an incorrectly identified fossil endocast, now believed to be from a condylarth. Newly prepared endocasts of Hyracotherium, the oldest horse and one of the earliest perissodactyls, reveal a relatively larger brain, with a more expanded neocortex, than existed in the condylarth ancestors of perissodactyls. Fifty million years ago, horse brains had suprasylvian, ectolateral, and lateral sulci, but the frontal lobe was undeveloped.
Endemic eastern equine encephalomyelitis in Florida: a twenty-year analysis, 1955-1974.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    November 1, 1976   Volume 25, Issue 6 884-890 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1976.25.884
Bigler WJ, Lassing EB, Buff EE, Prather EC, Beck EC, Hoff GL.Research and surveillance programs relating to the circulation of eastern equine encephalomyelitis (EEE) virus in Florida between 1955 and 1974 are summarized. All available data suggest that EEE virus is 1) endemic in many Florida fresh water swamps and waterways, 2) active in a continuous cycle throughout the year with a peak between May and August, and 3) circulating in Culiseta melanura. It has been isolated also from eight other mosquito species.
Guttural pouch tympanites in a foal.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    November 1, 1976   Volume 71, Issue 11 1625-1627 
Lokai MD, Hardenbrook HJ, Benson GJ.No abstract available
Electron capture detection of an apomorphine heptafluorobutyrate derivative at low picogram levels.
Research communications in chemical pathology and pharmacology    November 1, 1976   Volume 15, Issue 3 447-455 
Miller JR, Blake JW, Tobin T.An electron capturing derivative of apomorphine was prepared by incubating the drug with heptafluorobutyric anhydride (HFBA), triethylamine and heat. Mass spectral analysis suggests that HFBA reacts with both phenolic hydroxyl groups on apomorphine to give a derivative detectable at low picogram levels. This method is sufficiently sensitive for pharmacokinetic studies in the horse and is likely applicable to other dopaminergic analogues of apomorphine.
Force plate studies of equine biomechanics.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1976   Volume 37, Issue 11 1251-1255 
Pratt GW, O'Connor JT.The force plate can measure a wide range of effects in the horse. The same instrument can record forces from more than a ton in the galloping animal to 25 g associated with the action of the heart. In all probability, the force plate will develop into a valuable clinical instrument.
Measurement of equine follicle stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone: response of anestrous mares to gonadotropin releasing hormone.
Biology of reproduction    November 1, 1976   Volume 15, Issue 4 477-484 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod15.4.477
Evans MJ, Irvine CH.No abstract available
Horse, ass, and mule chromosomes.
The Journal of heredity    November 1, 1976   Volume 67, Issue 6 361-367 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a108753
Eldridge F, Blazak WF.Karyotypes of the horse with 64 chromosomes, the ass with 62 chromosomes, and the mule with 63 chromosomes are presented. The chromosome complements of each species and their mule hybrid are analyzed and compared.
The purification and kinetic properties of biophosphoglycerate synthase from horse red blood cells.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    November 1, 1976   Volume 177, Issue 1 284-292 doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(76)90438-0
Rose AB, Dube S.No abstract available
Summary of the effect of prostalene, a new synthetic prostaglandin, on the breeding efficiency of mares.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    November 1, 1976   Volume 71, Issue 11 1616-1623 
Averkin G, Schiltz R.No abstract available
Surgical correction of myiasitic urethritis granulosa in the horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    November 1, 1976   Volume 71, Issue 11 1629-1632 
Finocchio EJ, Merriam JC.No abstract available
[Effect of ATP on carbohydrate metabolism].
Veterinariia    November 1, 1976   Issue 11 99-100 
Alekseev MIu.No abstract available
[A practical horse and pony health programme. II. Prevention of parasitic and infectious disease (author’s transl)].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    November 1, 1976   Volume 101, Issue 21 1189-1193 
Verberne LR, Mirck MH.No abstract available
[The ECG of the foal. 1. Development of the relationship of the myocardial mass to changes in the postnatal circulation].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    November 1, 1976   Volume 23, Issue 9 709-716 
Matthiesen T, Deegen E.No abstract available
Ethanolic fermentation of glucose by Torulopsis glabrata in the stomachs of neonates of the horse, dog, goat and Soay sheep.
The British veterinary journal    November 1, 1976   Volume 132, Issue 6 654-656 doi: 10.1016/s0007-1935(17)34546-3
White RW.No abstract available
Scanning electron microscopy of equine spermatozoa.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    November 1, 1976   Volume 48, Issue 2 413-414 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0480413
Sharma OP.No abstract available
The diagnosis of liver dysfunction in farm animals and horses.
The Veterinary record    October 23, 1976   Volume 99, Issue 17 330-334 doi: 10.1136/vr.99.17.330
Mullen PA.No abstract available
Examination of stallions.
The Veterinary record    October 23, 1976   Volume 99, Issue 17 342 doi: 10.1136/vr.99.17.342
Sinclair DV.No abstract available
An equine cryptorchid with testicular and ovarian tissues.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1976   Volume 8, Issue 4 156-160 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1976.tb03329.x
McIlwraith CW, Owen RA, Basrur PK.Cytogenetic and histological studies were carried out on an intersex horse which was diagnosed clinically as a cryptorchid. Surgery confirmed the horse to be a bilateral abdominal cryptorchid and histological examination revealed ovarian tissue associated with the left epididymis. Chromosome analysis of cultured cells from testicular tissue, ovarian tissue and skin revealed 64-XX and 64-XY make-up, the left gonad containing a greater preponderance of XX cells over XY cells. The external characteristics and behaviour of the horse were indistinguishable from that of a "routine" cryptorchid. Othe...