Analyze Diet

Topic:Animal Species

The topic "Animal Species and Horses" explores the interactions and relationships between horses and various other animal species. This includes understanding the ecological roles horses play within their environments, as well as their interactions with domestic and wild animals. Research in this area may cover aspects such as competition for resources, symbiotic relationships, and behavioral influences between horses and other species. Studies may also investigate the impact of horses on biodiversity and ecosystem dynamics. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that examine these interspecies relationships, focusing on the ecological, behavioral, and environmental implications of horses interacting with other animals.
[Evolution of molars from the Eocene Equieae to the Daman (Procavia) and the horse (Equus) of today].
The Journal of Nihon University School of Dentistry    December 1, 1965   Volume 7, Issue 4 192-199 
Friant M.No abstract available
[Comparative behavior studies on lying-down and rising in hoofed animals].
Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie    November 1, 1965   Volume 22, Issue 6 696-723 
Zannier-Tanner E.No abstract available
Studies of cardiac dynamics in animals (horses, cattle, sheep, goats).
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    September 8, 1965   Volume 127, Issue 1 379-392 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1965.tb49415.x
Spörri H.No abstract available
[Comparative studies on the platelet and erythrocyte thromboplastic activity of various animal species].
Acta physiologica Polonica    July 1, 1965   Volume 16, Issue 4 505-511 
Poplawski A, Worowski K.No abstract available
[Variability of the response of the coronary vessels of various animal species to biogenic amines].
Archivio italiano di scienze farmacologiche    July 1, 1965   Volume 15, Issue 3 189-196 
Chieppa D, Siro-Brigiani G, Antoncecchi E.No abstract available
[Thin-layer chromatography demonstration of free amino acids in the blood of horses, cattle, pigs and poultry].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    May 1, 1965   Volume 12, Issue 4 395-399 
Weiser M, Hasitschka P, Stöckl W.No abstract available
CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT: DIFFERENCES BETWEEN EQUUS CABALLUS AND EQUUS PRZEWALSKII, POLIAKOFF.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    April 16, 1965   Volume 148, Issue 3668 382-383 doi: 10.1126/science.148.3668.382
BENIRSCHKE K, MALOUF N, LOW RJ, HECK H.The chromosome number of the domestic horse is 2n = 64; different races have the same complement. The chromosomes of two Przewalski's horses (at Catskill Game Farm, New York), presumably ancestral wild horses from Mongolia, are identical: 2n = 66, with more acrocentric and fewer metacentric elements than the chromosomes of the domestic horse. This apparent difference in karyotype may help resolve the questions of "purity" in the relatively few remaining Przewalski's horses. Moreover, these findings are of interest in relation to the apparent fertility of hybrids between these species.
[Immunogenetic studies on English half-bred horses in Yugoslavia].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    April 1, 1965   Volume 12, Issue 3 243-249 
Schmid DO, Mancić D.No abstract available
On the Thrombin-Fibrinogen Reaction in Different Species.
Acta chemica Scandinavica    January 1, 1965   Volume 19 751-753 doi: 10.3891/acta.chem.scand.19-0751
BLOMBAECK B, TEGER-NILSSON AC.No abstract available
[Comparative studies on the amyloid and paramyloid of several animal species. II. Histochemistry of the amyloids and paramyloids].
Pathologia veterinaria    January 1, 1965   Volume 2, Issue 5 493-513 
Trautwein G.No abstract available
[Relationship between the potassium content of erythrocytes of some animal species and the sodium and potassium dependent adenosine triphosphatase activity of the red blood cells].
Archivio di scienze biologiche    October 1, 1964   Volume 48, Issue 4 409-415 
Lucaroni A, Millo A.No abstract available
COAT COLOR IN SMALL HORSES OF THE PHILIPPINES.
The Journal of heredity    September 1, 1964   Volume 55 220-224 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a107339
SINGLETON WR, DENT JN.No abstract available
A Comparative Study in Three Dimensions of the Blood Supply of the Normal Interventricular Septum in Human, Canine, Bovine, Porcine, Ovine, and Equine Heart.
Diseases of the chest    September 1, 1964   Volume 46 251-262 doi: 10.1378/chest.46.3.251
BERTHO E, GAGNON G.No abstract available
[Studies of the N-Terminal Amino Acid Sequence in the Serum Albumins of Different Animals].
Biokhimiia (Moscow, Russia)    July 1, 1964   Volume 29 741-748 
ORLOVSKAIA NN, BELITSER VA.No abstract available
Species Specificity of Bovine, Pig, Sheep, and Horse Myosins.
Nature    June 27, 1964   Volume 202 1332-1333 doi: 10.1038/2021332a0
FURMINGER IG.No abstract available
On the Nature of Plant Agglutinin Receptors of Some Erythrocyte Mucoids in Man, Cattle, and Horses.
Zeitschrift fur Immunitats- und Allergieforschung    June 1, 1964   Volume 126 408-414 
KRUEPE M, UHLENBRUCK G.No abstract available
The Atrio-Ventricular Connections in the Hearts of Ovis aries, Capra hircus, Bos taurus, and Equus caballus.
Biologica Latina    April 1, 1964   Volume 17 113-144 
PALMIERI G, ASOLE A.No abstract available
Ceruloplasmins of Several Animal Species: Comparison of Electrophoretic Mobilities and Substrate Specificity. MARTIN GM, DERR MA, BENDITT EP.No abstract available
[Normal Comparative Anatomy of the Coronary Arteries and Veins of the Hearts of Different Animal Species (Man, Dog, Calf, Pig, Sheep, Horse, Roe-Deer, and Moose)]. BERTHO E.No abstract available
Somatic chromosomes of the horse, the donkey and their hybrids, the mule and the hinny.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    December 1, 1962   Volume 4 319-326 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0040319
BENIRSCHKE K, BROWNHILL LE, BEATH MM.No abstract available
Basophilic degeneration of the myocardium in a whale and a horse.
American journal of clinical pathology    November 1, 1962   Volume 38 530-532 doi: 10.1093/ajcp/38.5.530
SCOTTI TM.No abstract available
[Immunoelectrophoresis of the serum from various mammalian species. Antigenic relations and application].
La Tunisie medicale    July 1, 1962   Volume 40 465-469 
SCHNEIDER R, DURAND M.No abstract available
Blood groups in chimpanzees, horses, sheep, pigs, and other mammals.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    May 3, 1962   Volume 97 320-328 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1962.tb34646.x
EYQUEM A, PODLIACHOUK L, MILLOT P.No abstract available
Left ventricular function in mammals of greatly different size.
Circulation research    May 1, 1962   Volume 10 798-806 doi: 10.1161/01.res.10.5.798
HOLT JP, RHODE EA, PEOPLES SA, KINES H.Studies of left ventricular volume and pressure have been carried out in the control state in four classes of intact anesthetized mammals (horses, cattle, swine, and dogs), body weights of which varied 54-fold. On the basis of these studies of both large and small hearts, extending over a wide range, a pattern of function for the left ventricle of all mammals has been described. Mathematical equations are given describing the interrelationships between left ventricular end-diastolic volume and end-systolic volume, stroke volume, cardiac output, stroke-work, heart rate, and total peripheral res...
Chromosomes of the horse, the donkey, and the mule.
Chromosoma    January 1, 1962   Volume 13 243-248 doi: 10.1007/BF00577041
TRUJILLO JM, STENIUS C, CHRISTIAN LC, OHNO S.No abstract available
The comparative pathology of experimental Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis infection in different animal hosts.
The Journal of infectious diseases    January 1, 1962   Volume 110 80-97 doi: 10.1093/infdis/110.1.80
GLEISER CA, GOCHENOUR WS, BERGE TO, TIGERTT WD.No abstract available
The palomino horse.
Genetics    September 1, 1961   Volume 46, Issue 9 1143-1150 doi: 10.1093/genetics/46.9.1143
CASTLE WE, SINGLETON WR.No abstract available
[Blood groups of Equidae of Tchad].
Annales de l'Institut Pasteur    January 1, 1961   Volume 100 133-136 
PODLIACHOUK L, QUEVAL R.No abstract available
Operant responding in a horse under several schedules of reinforcement.
Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior    April 1, 1960   Volume 3, Issue 2 161-164 doi: 10.1901/jeab.1960.3-161
MYERS RD, MESKER DC.No abstract available
On the intestinal yeast flora of horses, sheep, goats and swine.
Journal of general microbiology    December 1, 1958   Volume 19, Issue 3 435-445 doi: 10.1099/00221287-19-3-435
VAN UDEN N, DO SOUSA LC, FARINHA M.From the caeca of 252 horses, 503 sheep, 250 goats and 250 swine, 486 yeast isolates belonging to 28 species and 1 variety were obtained. The distribution of the yeasts of any species and for Candida albicans respectively was: horses, 52·4%, 4·4%; sheep, 6·8%, 4·2%; goats, 6·4%, 08%; swine, 88·8%, 9·2%. The suitability of the sheep and goats as hosts for yeasts of any species seems very limited. The most frequent occurrences for single species were: Candida slooffii in swine (48·4%), Trichosporon cutaneum in horses (21·8%) and Saccharomyces tellustris (Candida bovina) in swine (14%...