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.
Reference Values and Repeatability of B-Mode and M-Mode Echocardiographic Parameters in Healthy Donkey (Equus asinus)-The Guide to Assess Healthy Heart.
Journal of equine veterinary science    January 16, 2020   Volume 88 102929 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2020.102929
Farag AMM, Ibrahim HMM.Donkey (Equus asinus), the cheapest form of agricultural power in Egypt, is used principally as draught or pack animals and may also be ridden, or used for threshing, raising water, milling, and other work. The aim of the present study was to provide B-mode and M-mode echocardiographic reference ranges from a sample of population of donkeys (E. asinus) based on the probability theory and statistics. In the present study, B-mode and 2-dimensional guided M-mode echocardiography were performed on 44 clinically healthy donkeys (E. asinus) (22 males and 22 females), without any neither clinical nor...
The Effect of Diet Composition on the Digestibility and Fecal Excretion of Phosphorus in Horses: A Potential Risk of P Leaching?
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    January 15, 2020   Volume 10, Issue 1 doi: 10.3390/ani10010140
Saastamoinen M, Särkijärvi S, Valtonen E.The main horse phosphorus excretion pathway is through the dung. Phosphorus originating from animal dung and manure has harmful environmental effects on waters. The number of horses has increased in many countries, and several studies have pointed that leaching of P from horse paddocks and pastures are hotspots for high P leaching losses. The hypothesis was that feeding regimes might influence phosphorus digestibility and excretion in feces, and therefore the environmental impact of horse husbandry. A digestibility experiment was conducted with six horses fed six forage-based diets to study ph...
The effects of extended photoperiod and warmth on hair growth in ponies and horses at different times of year.
PloS one    January 14, 2020   Volume 15, Issue 1 e0227115 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0227115
O'Brien C, Darcy-Dunne MR, Murphy BA.Photoperiod is considered the most dominant environmental cue allowing animals to anticipate and adapt to seasonal changes. In seasonally breeding mammals, changes in daylength alter pineal melatonin secretion and pituitary prolactin secretion. During the seasonal transition to shorter winter daylengths, increased production of melatonin and declining prolactin are associated with triggering winter coat growth in many animals. Similarly, studies have shown that artificial extension of photoperiod suppresses melatonin secretion and lifts prolactin inhibition to activate moulting. Four longitudi...
Identification of Novel lncRNAs Differentially Expressed in Placentas of Chinese Ningqiang Pony and Yili Horse Breeds.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    January 11, 2020   Volume 10, Issue 1 119 doi: 10.3390/ani10010119
Pu Y, Zhang Y, Zhang T, Han J, Ma Y, Liu X.As a nutrient sensor, the placenta plays a key role in regulating fetus growth and development. Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been shown to regulate growth-related traits. However, the biological function of lncRNAs in horse placentas remains unclear. To compare the expression patterns of lncRNAs in the placentas of the Chinese Ningqiang (NQ) and Yili (YL) breeds, we performed a transcriptome analysis using RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) technology. NQ is a pony breed with an average adult height at the withers of less than 106 cm, whereas that of YL is around 148 cm. Based on 813 million high...
Androgen Receptor Gene Variants in New Cases of Equine Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome.
Genes    January 10, 2020   Volume 11, Issue 1 78 doi: 10.3390/genes11010078
Villagomez DAF, Welsford EG, King WA, Revay T.In the domestic horse; failure of normal masculinization and virilization due to deficiency of androgenic action leads to a specific disorder of sexual development known as equine androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS). Affected individuals appear to demonstrate an incoherency between their genetic sex and sexual phenotype; i.e., XY-sex chromosome constitution and female phenotypic appearance. AIS is well documented in humans. Here we report the finding of two novel genetic variants for the AR-gene identified in a Tennessee Walking Horse and a Thoroughbred horse mare; each in individual clinica...
Whole-genome sequence analysis reveals candidate genomic footprints and genes associated with reproductive traits in Thoroughbred horse.
Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene    January 10, 2020   Volume 55, Issue 2 200-208 doi: 10.1111/rda.13608
Asadollahpour Nanaei H, Ayatollahi Mehrgardi A, Esmailizadeh A.The primary objective of most horse breeding operations was to maximize reproductive efficiency and minimize the cost of producing live foals. Here, we compared individual horses from the Thoroughbred population (n = 17), known as a horse breed with poor reproductive performance, with other six horse populations (n = 28), to detect genomic signatures of positive selection underlying of reproductive traits. A number of protein-coding genes with significant (p-value <.01) higher F values (616 genes) and a lower value for nucleotide diversity (π) (310 genes) were identified. The results of o...
Editorial: Current Research in Equid Herpesvirus Type-1 (EHV-1).
Frontiers in veterinary science    January 10, 2020   Volume 6 492 doi: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00492
Stokol T, Soboll Hussey G.No abstract available
A Cross-Sectional Survey of Foaling-Related Parameters of Jennies (Equus asinus) Under Smallholder Farm Conditions in Northeast China.
Journal of equine veterinary science    January 10, 2020   Volume 87 102928 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2020.102928
Deng L, Shi S, Li J, Tang C, Liao Q, Xie P.It is important to assess the reproductive efficiency and improve the reproductive management to promote the donkey population development. The overall foaling-related parameters of jennies under smallholder farm conditions in China were hardly under investigation. A cross-sectional survey of randomly selected 694 smallholder farms was conducted in 40 villages in the north, east, and south areas of Western Liaoning Province and Eastern Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region between March and July, 2017. Foaling-related parameters were assessed such as the mean age at first foaling, foaling rate and ...
Genome-Wide Association Study and Subsequent Exclusion of ATCAY as a Candidate Gene Involved in Equine Neuroaxonal Dystrophy Using Two Animal Models.
Genes    January 10, 2020   Volume 11, Issue 1 doi: 10.3390/genes11010082
Hales EN, Esparza C, Peng S, Dahlgren AR, Peterson JM, Miller AD, Finno CJ.Equine neuroaxonal dystrophy/equine degenerative myeloencephalopathy (eNAD/EDM) is an inherited neurodegenerative disorder of unknown etiology. Clinical signs of neurological deficits develop within the first year of life in vitamin E (vitE) deficient horses. A genome-wide association study (GWAS) was carried out using 670,000 SNP markers in 27 case and 42 control Quarter Horses. Two markers, encompassing a 2.5 Mb region on ECA7, were associated with the phenotype (p = 2.05 × 10-7 and 4.72 × 10-6). Within this region, caytaxin (ATCAY) was identified as a candidate gene due to its known role ...
A Comparison of Traditional and Geometric Morphometric Techniques for the Study of Basicranial Morphology in Horses: A Case Study of the Araucanian Horse from Colombia.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    January 10, 2020   Volume 10, Issue 1 118 doi: 10.3390/ani10010118
Parés-Casanova PM, Salamanca-Carreño A, Crosby-Granados RA, Bentez-Molano J.Skull size and shape have been widely used to study domestic animal populations and breeds. Although several techniques have been proposed to quantify cranial form, few attempts have been made to compare the results obtained by different techniques. While linear morphometrics has traditionally been used in breed characterization, recent advances in geometric morphometrics have created new techniques for specifically quantifying shape and size. The objective of this study was to compare two morphometric methods for their ability to describe external morphology. For this purpose, 20 skull specim...
Effect of food contamination and collection material in the measurement of biomarkers in saliva of horses.
Research in veterinary science    January 8, 2020   Volume 129 90-95 doi: 10.1016/j.rvsc.2020.01.006
Contreras-Aguilar MD, Hevia ML, Escribano D, Lamy E, Tecles F, Cerón JJ.This study aims to evaluate the effect of the presence of food and the material used in a panel of biomarkers in saliva of horses. For the food effect study, clean saliva was incubated with a known amount of food consisting of oats, hay or grass. Significant changes were observed when saliva was incubated with oats for total protein (P = .050) and phosphorus (P = .008), with grass for total protein (P = .037), salivary alpha-amylase (sAA, P = .018), total esterase (TEA, P = .018), butyrilcholinesterase (BChE, P = .037), adenosine deaminase (ADA, P = .037), and total bilirubin (PÂ...
Green Assets of Equines in the European Context of the Ecological Transition of Agriculture.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    January 8, 2020   Volume 10, Issue 1 106 doi: 10.3390/ani10010106
Rzekęć A, Vial C, Bigot G.Despite the decline of equine populations in the middle of the 20th century, the European horse industry is growing again thanks to economic alternatives found in the diversification of the uses of equines (sports, racing, leisure, etc.). Equines have many environmental advantages, but the fragmentation of the sector and the lack of synthetic knowledge about their environmental impacts do not enable the promotion of these assets and their effective inclusion in management practices and European policies. To highlight the equine environmental impacts, a literature review was carried out to cove...
Could snorts inform us on how horses perceive riding?
Behavioural processes    January 7, 2020   Volume 172 104041 doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2020.104041
Stomp M, Masson A, Henry S, Hausberger M, Lesimple C.Several previous studies have shown that working conditions (including riding) can induce stress in horses. Riders' actions and postures, when inappropriate, induce stress and conflict behaviours during riding and welfare impairment and negative emotional states outside work. Optimistic biases have been found in leisure horses, which, amongst positive management factors, were ridden with loose reins and low hands. Thus, one can wonder whether horses may positively perceive work or parts of it. Indicators of positive emotions are poorly known yet but we recently found that, out of the working c...
Responses to death and dying: primates and other mammals.
Primates; journal of primatology    January 7, 2020   Volume 61, Issue 1 1-7 doi: 10.1007/s10329-019-00786-1
Anderson JR.Although some definitions of thanatology-broadly definable as the study of death and dying-exclude nonhumans as subjects, recognition of the scientific value of studying how other species respond to sick, injured, dying and dead conspecifics appears to be growing. And whereas earlier literature was largely characterized by anecdotal descriptions and sometimes fanciful interpretations, we now see more rigorous and often quantitative analysis of various behaviors displayed towards conspecifics (and sometimes heterospecifics) at various stages of incapacitation, including death. Studies of social...
A novel simple genotyping assay for detection of the ‘Gait keeper’ mutation in DMRT3 and allele frequencies in Azteca and Costa Rican Saddle Horse breeds.
Molecular and cellular probes    January 7, 2020   Volume 50 101506 doi: 10.1016/j.mcp.2019.101506
Ayala-Valdovinos MA, Galindo-García J, Sánchez-Chiprés D, Duifhuis-Rivera T, Anguiano-Estrella R.The 'Gait keeper' mutation in the DMRT3 gene alters locomotion and gait patterns in horses. This mutation (C>A) has been found in all gaited breeds of horses analyzed but is absent in most non-gaited breeds. We developed a new mutagenically separated polymerase chain reaction (MS-PCR) based method for simple detection of horse DMRT3 genotype. Our method was applied in a preliminary study to determine DMRT3 allele frequencies in 78 Azteca horses (AZ) and 53 Costa Rican Saddle Horses (CRSH). We found a wild-type C allele frequency of 100% in the AZ horses. For the CRSH, the wild-type C freque...
Preliminary Proof of the Concept of Wild (Feral) Horses Following Light Aircraft into a Trap.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    January 2, 2020   Volume 10, Issue 1 80 doi: 10.3390/ani10010080
McDonnell S, Torcivia C.Feral horses, wherever managed, typically require population control involving capture for permanent removal or repeatedly for fertility control treatments. The most common method for capturing feral horses is helicopter chasing into traps. With this fear-based strategy, it is difficult to safely capture entire groups. Recapture becomes increasingly difficult, with greater safety risks for pilots and ground staff. As preliminary proof of the concept of capturing free-roaming horses by leading into enclosures with light aircraft rather than driving with helicopters, a consumer-grade quadcopter ...
Quality Improvement of Post-Thawed Stallion Epididymal Spermatozoa with Single Layer Centrifugation.
Cryo letters    January 1, 2020   Volume 41, Issue 1 6-12 
Cunha Dos Santos FC, Morrell JM, Nunes MM, Nogueira CE, Curcio BR, Malschitzky E.Epididymal sperm cryopreservation represents the ultimate option to preserve spermatozoa of valuable stallions. Objective: The study aims to evalute whether single layer centrifugation (SLC) prior to cryopreservation or after post-thawing improves the quality of stallion epididymal sperm. Methods: Epididymal sperms of stallions were harvested (N=20). Sperm samples were subjected to treatments: conventional centrifugation, SLC prior to cryopreservation (SLC-PC) or SLC post-thaw (SLC+). All samples were cryopreserved, thawed and evaluated. SLC+ were thawed, single layer cenrifuged and resuspende...
Equine recombination map updated to EquCab3.0.
Animal genetics    December 30, 2019   Volume 51, Issue 2 341-342 doi: 10.1111/age.12898
Beeson SK, Mickelson JR, McCue ME.No abstract available
Morphological and Imaging Evaluation of the Metacarpophalangeal and Metatarsophalangeal Joints in Healthy and Lame Donkeys.
Journal of equine veterinary science    December 26, 2019   Volume 88 102904 doi: 10.1016/j.jevs.2019.102904
El-Gendy SAA, Alsafy MAM, Rutland CS, El-Khamary AN, Abu-Ahmed HM, El-Kammar MH.The donkey is of socio-economic value yet imaging techniques in both healthy and abnormal limbs are a limiting factor in research and medicine. The objective was to determine anatomical features of both healthy and clinically abnormal donkey metacarpophalangeal and metatarsophalangeal joints (n = 13) using anatomical dissection, casting, X-ray and computed tomography. The joint capsule contained two palmar/plantar and two dorsal recesses. The proximal-palmar or plantar recess was larger than the distodorsal recess and potential sites of approaches to the recesses were determined. Soft tissue ...
Comparison of three systems for predicting the digestible energy value of natural grassland and lucerne hays for horses.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    December 26, 2019   Volume 14, Issue 7 1413-1421 doi: 10.1017/S1751731119003069
Martin-Rosset W, Andueza D, Vermorel M.The accuracy and precision of the National Research Council (NRC), Gesellschaft für Ernährungsphysiologie (GfE) and Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) systems for predicting the digestible energy (DE) value of hays were determined from the results of 15 digestibility trials with natural grassland hays and 9 digestibility trials with lucerne hays that all met strict experimental and a tight corpus of methods. The hays were harvested in the temperate zone. They covered broad ranges of chemical composition and DE value. The INRA system was more accurate than the other two syst...
Whole-Genome Signatures of Selection in Sport Horses Revealed Selection Footprints Related to Musculoskeletal System Development Processes.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    December 26, 2019   Volume 10, Issue 1 53 doi: 10.3390/ani10010053
Salek Ardestani S, Aminafshar M, Zandi Baghche Maryam MB, Banabazi MH, Sargolzaei M, Miar Y.Selective breeding has led to gradual changes at the genome level of horses. Deciphering selective pressure patterns is progressive to understand how breeding strategies have shaped the sport horse genome; although, little is known about the genomic regions under selective pressures in sport horse breeds. The major goal of this study was to shed light on genomic regions and biological pathways under selective pressures in sport horses. In this study, whole-genome sequences of 16 modern sport and 35 non-sport horses were used to investigate the genomic selective signals of sport performance, by...
Human Relationships with Domestic and Other Animals: One Health, One Welfare, One Biology.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    December 24, 2019   Volume 10, Issue 1 43 doi: 10.3390/ani10010043
Tarazona AM, Ceballos MC, Broom DM.Excessive human population growth, uncontrolled use of natural resources, including deforestation, mining, wasteful systems, biodiversity reduction by agriculture, and damaging climate change affect the existence of all animals, including humans. This discussion is now urgent and people are rethinking their links with the animals we use for clothing, food, work, companionship, entertainment, and research. The concepts of one health, one welfare, and one biology are discussed as a background to driving global change. Nothing should be exploited without considering the ethics of the action and t...
Challenges on the conservation of traditional orchards: Tree damage as an indicator of sustainable grazing.
Journal of environmental management    December 23, 2019   Volume 257 110010 doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.110010
López-Sánchez A, Perea R, Roig S, Isselstein J, Schmitz A.Traditional orchard meadows are among the most valuable cultural and agricultural systems for nature conservation in Europe. They comprise scattered fruit trees over a highly diverse herbaceous layer and provide a wide range of ecosystem services. However, they are strongly endangered due to farmland intensification and abandonment. Livestock grazing is known to promote grassland diversity but it may also cause tree damage through debarking. In this study, we evaluated the effect of different grazers (cattle, horse and sheep) on fruit trees in 42 traditional orchards of the Rhenish uplands (Ge...
Aminorex identified in horse urine following consumption of Barbarea vulgaris; a preliminary report.
Irish veterinary journal    December 23, 2019   Volume 72 15 doi: 10.1186/s13620-019-0153-5
Maylin G, Fenger C, Machin J, Kudrimoti S, Eisenberg R, Green J, Tobin T.Aminorex, (RS)-5- Phenyl-4,5-dihydro-1,3-oxazol-2-amine, is an amphetamine-like anorectic and in the United States a Drug Enforcement Administration [DEA] Schedule 1 controlled substance. Aminorex in horse urine is usually present as a metabolite of Levamisole, an equine anthelmintic and immune stimulant. Recently, Aminorex identifications have been reported in horse urine with no history or evidence of Levamisole administration. Analysis of the urine samples suggested a botanical source, directing attention to the Brassicaceae plant family, with their contained GlucoBarbarin and Barbarin as p...
Assessment of the application for renewal of authorisation of Yea-Sacc® (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) for horses.
EFSA journal. European Food Safety Authority    December 19, 2019   Volume 17, Issue 12 e05918 doi: 10.2903/j.efsa.2019.5918
Bampidis V, Azimonti G, de Lourdes Bastos M, Christensen H, Dusemund B, Kouba M, Kos Durjava M, López-Alonso M, López Puente S, Marcon F, Mayo B....Yea-Sacc is an additive based on a live preparation of a strain of intended for use as a zootechnical additive (digestibility enhancer). The current assessment is performed in the context of the renewal of the authorisation of the feed additive; however, the applicant proposed also to lower (6.5 × 10 colony forming unit (CFU)/kg of complete feedingstuff) the minimum dose of the additive when used in feed for horses. The additive is produced in a powder (Yea-Sacc) and in a prills (Yea-Sacc_TS) forms. The Panel considered that the additive currently on the market complies with the existing ...
Brazilian Sport Horse: genetic parameters for approval of Brasileiro de Hipismo stallions.
Tropical animal health and production    December 19, 2019   Volume 52, Issue 4 1669-1680 doi: 10.1007/s11250-019-02168-7
Medeiros BR, Garbade P, Seixas L, Peripolli V, McManus C.The aim of this study was to evaluate genetic parameters for subjective scores given at the Brazilian Sport Horse (BSH) Stallion Approval by estimating heritability (h) for morphological, gait, and jumping traits and genetic correlations (γ) among the functional ones and by verifying selection feasibility. The analysis included 1179 complete evaluations from 294 horses, by 4.26 ± 0.96 judges. Each trait was evaluated using mixed models in SAS® v9.2, considering the individual as a random effect. Variance components and genetic parameters were obtained by single and two-trait animal mode...
Convergent genomic signatures of high-altitude adaptation among domestic mammals.
National science review    December 19, 2019   Volume 7, Issue 6 952-963 doi: 10.1093/nsr/nwz213
Wu DD, Yang CP, Wang MS, Dong KZ, Yan DW, Hao ZQ, Fan SQ, Chu SZ, Shen QS, Jiang LP, Li Y, Zeng L, Liu HQ, Xie HB, Ma YF, Kong XY, Yang SL, Dong XX....Abundant and diverse domestic mammals living on the Tibetan Plateau provide useful materials for investigating adaptive evolution and genetic convergence. Here, we used 327 genomes from horses, sheep, goats, cattle, pigs and dogs living at both high and low altitudes, including 73 genomes generated for this study, to disentangle the genetic mechanisms underlying local adaptation of domestic mammals. Although molecular convergence is comparatively rare at the DNA sequence level, we found convergent signature of positive selection at the gene level, particularly the gene in these Tibetan domest...
Genetic and serologic surveillance of canine (CIV) and equine (EIV) influenza virus in Nuevo León State, México.
PeerJ    December 17, 2019   Volume 7 e8239 doi: 10.7717/peerj.8239
Plata-Hipólito CB, Cedillo-Rosales S, Obregón-Macías N, Hernández-Luna CE, Rodríguez-Padilla C, Tamez-Guerra RS, Contreras-Cordero JF.Despite the uncontrolled distribution of the Influenza A virus through wild birds, the detection of canine influenza virus and equine influenza virus in Mexico was absent until now. Recently, outbreaks of equine and canine influenza have been reported around the world; the virus spreads quickly among animals and there is potential for zoonotic transmission. Methods: Amplification of the Influenza A virus matrix gene from necropsies, nasal and conjunctival swabs from trash service horses and pets/stray dogs was performed through RT-PCR. The seroprevalence was carried out through Sandwich enzyme...
Can Extracorporeal Shockwave Promote Osteogenesis of Equine Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells In Vitro?
Stem cells and development    December 17, 2019   Volume 29, Issue 2 110-118 doi: 10.1089/scd.2019.0202
Colbath AC, Kisiday JD, Phillips JN, Goodrich LR.Both bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMDMSCs) and extracorporeal shockwave (ESW) have shown promise for enhancing fracture repair. If exposure of BMDMSCs to ESW enhances osteogenic differentiation, these therapies may be combined in vivo or used as a method for preconditioning BMDMSCs. The objective of this study was to determine the effect of ESW on the osteogenic ability of equine BMDMSCs. We hypothesized that ESW would promote osteogenesis evidenced by increased gene expression, alkaline phosphatase (ALPL) expression, slide morphologic score, and protein expression. BMDMSCs were...
Pre-foaling season questionnaire: supplemental material to the article ‘Challenges in using serological methods to explore historical transmission risk of Chlamydia psittaci in a workforce with high exposure to equine chlamydiosis’.
Communicable diseases intelligence (2018)    December 16, 2019   Volume 43 doi: 10.33321/cdi.2019.43.64
Jones B, Taylor K, Lucas RM, Merritt T, Chicken C, Heller J, Carrick J, Givney R, Durrheim DN.No abstract available
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