Analyze Diet

Topic:Behavior

Equine behavior encompasses the study of horses' actions, reactions, and interactions within their environment and with other living beings. It includes the examination of innate behaviors, such as grazing and herd dynamics, as well as learned behaviors influenced by training and human interaction. Understanding equine behavior is essential for improving horse welfare, training methods, and management practices. This topic covers a range of behaviors, from social structures and communication to stress responses and problem behaviors. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the various aspects of equine behavior, including factors that influence it and its implications for horse management and welfare.
Pleasure horse practice.
Modern veterinary practice    January 1, 1974   Volume 55, Issue 1 19-23 
No abstract available
Sleep and wakefulness in the housed pony under different dietary conditions.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    January 1, 1974   Volume 38, Issue 1 65-71 
Dallaire A, Rucklebusch Y.For several weeks, three ponies kept in an environment with controlled light and temperature, were studied for behaviour (time spent in recumbency and time required to consume hay or oats) and for electrical activity of the brain (cortical and sub-cortical) during the night phase of the circadian rhythm. Recumbency was adopted by all the ponies for six or seven periods during the night. With a regimen of hay ad libitum, about four hours were cumulated in sternal recumbency and only one hour in complete lateral recumbency. Various degree of sleep, as identified by cortical and hippocampal elect...
[Crib-biting and wind-sucking (author’s transl)].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    November 15, 1973   Volume 98, Issue 22 1132-1137 
Hermans WA.No abstract available
Current practice problems: nymphomania in a mare.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 15, 1973   Volume 163, Issue 2 168 
Witherspoon DM.No abstract available
[The ethology of farm animals in veterinary diagnosis].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1973   Volume 1, Issue 4 391-396 
Cena M.No abstract available
[1st experiences with therapeutic horseback riding in a psychiatric hospital].
Der Nervenarzt    November 1, 1972   Volume 43, Issue 11 599 
Moll J.No abstract available
Human “barkers”.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1972   Volume 4, Issue 3 128-134 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1972.tb03893.x
Dunn PM.No abstract available
[Atlas fracture in a foal following wrong accustoming to halter].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    July 1, 1972   Volume 79, Issue 13 323 
Volcholrt W.No abstract available
[Various criteria for central nervous system maturity in mammals].
Arkhiv anatomii, gistologii i embriologii    July 1, 1972   Volume 63, Issue 7 89-92 
Dmitrieva NI.No abstract available
A laboratory restraining device for the pony.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1971   Volume 32, Issue 7 1097-1098 
Rosborough JP, Garner HE, Amend JF.No abstract available
Learning in farm animals.
Journal of animal science    June 1, 1971   Volume 32, Issue 6 1268-1273 doi: 10.2527/jas1971.3261268x
Kratzer DD.No abstract available
Book of accidents (1830). Excerpt XI: Riding a wild horse.
Pediatrics    May 1, 1971   Volume 47, Issue 5 947 
Cone TE.No abstract available
[Behavior of farm animals as related to veterinary diagnosis].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    January 1, 1971   Volume 58, Issue 5 221-224 
Cena M.No abstract available
The behaviour of horses recovering from anaesthesia.
The British veterinary journal    December 1, 1970   Volume 126, Issue 12 617-621 doi: 10.1016/s0007-1935(17)48019-5
Littlejohn A.No abstract available
[Castration of a nymphomaniacal mare].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    October 1, 1970   Volume 57, Issue 10 347 
Staub O.No abstract available
Effect of month and stallion on seminal characteristics and sexual behavior.
Journal of animal science    October 1, 1970   Volume 31, Issue 4 713-728 doi: 10.2527/jas1970.314713x
Pickett BW, Faulkner LC, Sutherland TM.No abstract available
Modern horse training methods–what is justifiable?
The Veterinary record    August 22, 1970   Volume 87, Issue 8 229-231 doi: 10.1136/vr.87.8.229
Friedberger JC.No abstract available
The natural experiment.
Medical times    May 1, 1970   Volume 98, Issue 5 119-131 
Warren JV.No abstract available
[Bringing down and securing horses with the use of a strap].
Veterinariia    February 1, 1970   Volume 2 75-76 
Miron NI.No abstract available
Aggression in horses.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine    February 1, 1970   Volume 63, Issue 2 163-167 
Thrower WR.No abstract available
[Behavior and somato-vegetative peculiarities of sleep states in Equidae (Equus caballus) and bovines (Bos taurus)].
Journal de physiologie    January 1, 1970   Volume 62 Suppl 2, Issue 2 311 
Ruckebusch Y.No abstract available
[Stages of sleep in the horse (Equus caballus)].
Comptes rendus des seances de la Societe de biologie et de ses filiales    January 1, 1970   Volume 164, Issue 3 658-665 
Ruckebusch Y, Barbey P, Guillemot P.No abstract available
[An example of behavior abnormalities connected with hepatic disorders in comparative pathology: hepatic encephalosis of horses].
L'Encephale    November 1, 1969   Volume 58, Issue 6 475-480 
Brion A.No abstract available
Sexual behavior in an intersex horse.
Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC    May 1, 1969   Volume 64, Issue 5 422 
Kodagali SB.No abstract available
[Ethologic observation of the forensic importance of fleeing behavior of horses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    January 1, 1969   Volume 82, Issue 1 13-16 
Zeeb K.No abstract available
Abnormal perinatal behaviour in the thoroughbred horse.
The British veterinary journal    December 1, 1968   Volume 124, Issue 12 540-553 doi: 10.1016/s0007-1935(17)39029-2
Rossdale PD.Diagnosis in veterinary medicine is based upon observations of the manner in which the behavioural patterns differ from those exhibited by normal subjects. The newborn foal adapts to an advanced level of activity within a period which is short relative to many other species, and the behavioural patterns which it exhibits during the period of adaptation are comparatively stereotyped. Because the status of any newborn mammal is affected by its previous experience of foetal development and birth, the behavioural patterns of the mother form an important anamnesis in the life of each individual neo...
[Contribution to the “stroking” of the horse].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    January 1, 1968   Volume 55, Issue 2 101-103 
Fessl L.No abstract available
Clinical studies on the newborn thoroughbred foal. I. Perinatal behaviour.
The British veterinary journal    November 1, 1967   Volume 123, Issue 11 470-481 doi: 10.1016/s0007-1935(17)39702-6
Rossdale PD.No abstract available
Some aspects of normal and of abnormal seual behaviour in farm animals.
Annales d'endocrinologie    November 1, 1967   Volume 28, Issue 6 815-820 
Vandeplassche M, Spincemaille J.No abstract available
Restraint in the horse.
The Veterinary record    January 14, 1967   Volume 80, Issue 2 56-62 doi: 10.1136/vr.80.2.56
Fraser AC.No abstract available