Analyze Diet

Topic:Domestic Animals

The study and analysis of "Domestic Animals" and horses examines the historical domestication, breeding, and management practices that have shaped the role of horses in human society. It also explores the anatomical, physiological, and behavioral characteristics that differentiate horses from other domestic species. Comparative studies often focus on aspects such as nutrition, health management, and the economic and cultural importance of horses relative to other domesticated animals. This page aggregates peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the various dimensions of equine domestication, including genetic studies, welfare considerations, and the impact of domestication on horse behavior and physiology.
Pleomorphic corneal sarcoma resembling malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor in a horse.
Veterinary pathology    January 27, 2009   Volume 46, Issue 3 444-448 doi: 10.1354/vp.08-VP-0067-K-BC
Kappe EC, Köhler K, Felbert IV, Teifke JP, Tóth J, Reinacher M.A 14-year-old Haflinger gelding presented with a protruding mass involving the cornea of the right eye. The mass was resected and submitted for histopathologic and immunohistochemical examination. The preliminary diagnosis was corneal sarcoma, most likely fibrosarcoma. The immunohistochemical results confirmed the mesenchymal origin of the neoplastic cells, which were most consistent with a malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor. Corneal mesenchymal neoplasms are extremely uncommon tumors in human beings and domestic animals. The cause for this tumor was not determined; infection with bovine ...
[Veterinary dentistry: an update 2008].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    January 13, 2009   Volume 133, Issue 23 998-1002 
van Foreest A.Rooted in human dentistry, veterinary dentistry has developed steadily in the Netherlands since the 1980s and is now recognized as an essential discipline of veterinary medicine. The availability of specialized tools and techniques has led to improved treatment outcomes and results, with the choice of treatment being largely determined by the functionality of the dentition and the costs involved. Domestic animals and horses with dental problems should be referred to dental veterinarians. The Working Group Veterinary Dentistry in the Netherlands is an association for skilled veterinarians with ...
Cross-modal individual recognition in domestic horses (Equus caballus).
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America    December 15, 2008   Volume 106, Issue 3 947-951 doi: 10.1073/pnas.0809127105
Proops L, McComb K, Reby D.Individual recognition is considered a complex process and, although it is believed to be widespread across animal taxa, the cognitive mechanisms underlying this ability are poorly understood. An essential feature of individual recognition in humans is that it is cross-modal, allowing the matching of current sensory cues to identity with stored information about that specific individual from other modalities. Here, we use a cross-modal expectancy violation paradigm to provide a clear and systematic demonstration of cross-modal individual recognition in a nonhuman animal: the domestic horse. Su...
ISSLS prize winner: positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance imaging for monitoring interbody fusion with equine bone protein extract, recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2, and autograft.
Spine    November 13, 2008   Volume 33, Issue 25 2683-2690 doi: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e31817fce91
Foldager C, Bendtsen M, Zou X, Zou L, Olsen AK, Munk OL, Stødkilde-Jørgensen H, Bünger C.Prospective and randomized experimental study with anterior lumbar interbody fusion in a porcine model. Objective: To assess the early time-course of spinal fusion with equine bone protein extract (COLLOSS E), recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2), and autograft using quantitative methods of positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Background: Different growth and differentiation factors are currently being used for inducing bone formation in spinal fusion. However, the mechanisms and time-course of bone formation using the...
[Toward exploration of morphological disparity of measurable traits of mammalian skull. 1. Interrelation between different forms of group variation].
Zhurnal obshchei biologii    October 30, 2008   Volume 69, Issue 5 344-354 
Pavlinov IIa, Nanova OG, Spasskaia NN.Interrelations between some forms of group variation (FGVs) (age, sex, geographic, inter-species, differences among breeds) of 12 to 15 measurable skull traits are studied in 6 mammal species (pine marten, polar fox, Przewalskii horse, and 3 jird species) by means of dispersion analysis (model III, MANOVA). The above FGVs are considered as factors in the MANOVA, and skull traits are considered as dependent variables. To obtaine commeasurables estimates for the FGVs, each of them is assessed numerically as a portion of its dispersion in the entire morphological disparity defined for each charac...
A unique method to produce transgenic embryos in ovine, porcine, feline, bovine and equine species.
Reproduction, fertility, and development    October 10, 2008   Volume 20, Issue 7 741-749 doi: 10.1071/rd07172
Pereyra-Bonnet F, Fernández-Martín R, Olivera R, Jarazo J, Vichera G, Gibbons A, Salamone D.Transgenesis is an essential tool in many biotechnological applications. Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI)-mediated gene transfer is a powerful technique to obtain transgenic pups; however, most domestic animal embryos do not develop properly after ICSI. An additional step in the protocol, namely assistance by haploid chemical activation, permits the use of ICSI-mediated gene transfer to generate transgenic preimplantation embryos in a wide range of domestic species, including ovine, porcine, feline, equine and bovine. In the present study, spermatozoa from five species were coincubated ...
Serological survey of domestic animals for tick-borne encephalitis and Bhanja viruses in northeastern Hungary.
Veterinary microbiology    October 9, 2008   Volume 135, Issue 3-4 267-271 doi: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2008.09.082
Sikutová S, Hornok S, Hubálek Z, Dolezálková I, Juricová Z, Rudolf I.Blood sera collected from 400 domestic animals (260 cattle, 100 Merino sheep, and 40 Hutzul horses) in northeastern Hungary in 2005 were examined for antibodies against two tick-borne viruses, tick-borne encephalitis flavivirus (TBEV) and Bhanja bunyavirus (BHAV). Using ELISA as screening test and plaque-reduction neutralization as confirmatory test, seropositivity to TBEV was found to be 26.5% in cattle, 7.0% in sheep, and 0.0% in horses. Among cattle, the animals up to 3 years old had significantly lower seroprevalence rate than those in older age groups. Natural foci of tick-borne encephali...
[“The course participants are not suddenly veterinarians themselves”].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    October 7, 2008   Volume 133, Issue 18 772-773 
Haneveld JK.No abstract available
ASAS Centennial Paper: The future of teaching and research in companion animal biology in departments of animal sciences.
Journal of animal science    September 26, 2008   Volume 87, Issue 1 447-454 doi: 10.2527/jas.2008-1402
McNamara JP.Departments of animal sciences must be relevant to a society in which a small number of people can raise almost all the food animal products needed. The declining number of people involved in animal agriculture has decreased enrollment of students interested in food animals in many departments of animal science. However, several departments welcomed students from a diverse background and began research on animals other than food animals. In many states, the undergraduate enrollment is made up primarily of students interested only in companion animals. A benefit of this is that we have recruite...
Public health use of surveillance for West Nile virus in horses: Saskatchewan, 2003-2005.
Transboundary and emerging diseases    August 27, 2008   Volume 55, Issue 9-10 411-416 doi: 10.1111/j.1865-1682.2008.01051.x
Epp T, Waldner C, Corrigan R, Curry P.West Nile virus (WNV) infection in horses was first reported in Canada in 2001 and in the province of Saskatchewan in 2002. This paper outlines the surveillance results of WNV in Saskatchewan horses from 2003 to 2005 and describes the usefulness of its inclusion in an integrated surveillance program in Saskatchewan. The number of human and horse cases was highest in 2003, the epidemic year and then substantially lower in 2004 and 2005. Horses provided additive information about WNV activity in rural areas with low human population, however, this required willingness and active participation by...
Habitat-specific population growth of a farmland bird.
PloS one    August 20, 2008   Volume 3, Issue 8 e3006 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0003006
Arlt D, Forslund P, Jeppsson T, Pärt T.To assess population persistence of species living in heterogeneous landscapes, the effects of habitat on reproduction and survival have to be investigated. Results: We used a matrix population model to estimate habitat-specific population growth rates for a population of northern wheatears Oenanthe oenanthe breeding in farmland consisting of a mosaic of distinct habitat (land use) types. Based on extensive long-term data on reproduction and survival, habitats characterised by tall field layers (spring- and autumn-sown crop fields, ungrazed grasslands) displayed negative stochastic population ...
Hepatitis E virus infection among domestic animals in eastern China.
Zoonoses and public health    July 22, 2008   Volume 55, Issue 6 291-298 doi: 10.1111/j.1863-2378.2008.01136.x
Zhang W, Shen Q, Mou J, Gong G, Yang Z, Cui L, Zhu J, Ju G, Hua X.Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a zoonotic pathogen of which several species of animal were reported as reservoirs. Antibodies to HEV and HEV RNA have been detected in some Chinese population and swine groups but few other domestic animals. In this study, to investigate the HEV prevalence, we tested sera from 788 pigs, 100 cows, 50 goats, 49 horses, 101 pet dogs, 105 chickens, 47 duck and 45 pigeons in eastern China for anti-HEV immunoglobulin G (IgG). We also tested 50% of the swine sera, all of sera from the other domestic animals and 13 Shanghai human sera which were positive for anti-HEV immuno...
A commentary on domestic animals as dual-purpose models that benefit agricultural and biomedical research.
Journal of animal science    June 20, 2008   Volume 86, Issue 10 2797-2805 doi: 10.2527/jas.2008-1088
Ireland JJ, Roberts RM, Palmer GH, Bauman DE, Bazer FW.Research on domestic animals (cattle, swine, sheep, goats, poultry, horses, and aquatic species) at land grant institutions is integral to improving the global competitiveness of US animal agriculture and to resolving complex animal and human diseases. However, dwindling federal and state budgets, years of stagnant funding from USDA for the Competitive State Research, Education, and Extension Service National Research Initiative (CSREES-NRI) Competitive Grants Program, significant reductions in farm animal species and in numbers at land grant institutions, and declining enrollment for graduate...
Comparative activities of semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) in five domestic species.
Polish journal of veterinary sciences    June 11, 2008   Volume 11, Issue 1 63-66 
Al-Wabel NA.Semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) activity was measured spectrophotometrically using benzylamine as a substrate, in the serum of healthy males and females of horses, camels, cattle, sheep and goats. The animals were born and raised in the same area, and the blood collection was made on the same day to avoid variations. Also the concentrations of protein and copper were measured in the same samples. There were no significant gender-related differences in SSAO activity between the tested animals regardless of species. Activities of SSAO in either male or female of horse were significa...
[Swiss horse research network and the role of horses].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    May 21, 2008   Volume 150, Issue 4 155 doi: 10.1024/0036-7281.150.4.155
Poncet PA, Burger D, Trolliet C.No abstract available
Species-specific concentrations of perfluoroalkyl contaminants in farm and pet animals in Japan.
Chemosphere    April 24, 2008   Volume 73, Issue 1 Suppl S210-S215 doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2006.12.105
Guruge KS, Manage PM, Yamanaka N, Miyazaki S, Taniyasu S, Yamashita N.The persistent metabolites of perfluorinated compounds (PFCs) which have been detected in the tissues of both humans and wildlife, and human contamination by PFCs suggest differences in the exposure patterns to these compounds. However, studies focused on identifying human exposure pathways to PFCs are scarce. To provide a preliminary assessment of PFCs in farm animals such as chicken, cattle, pigs, goats and horses, blood and liver samples were collected from various regions in Japan. Additionally, dog sera samples representing pet animals were also employed for analysis. Perfluorooctane sulf...
Could adults be used to improve social skills of young horses, Equus caballus?
Developmental psychobiology    April 9, 2008   Volume 50, Issue 4 408-417 doi: 10.1002/dev.20301
Bourjade M, Moulinot M, Henry S, Richard-Yris MA, Hausberger M.We investigated the effects of the introduction of foreign adults on the behavior of young horses. First, we observed the behavior of 1- and 2-year-old domestic horses housed in same-age and same-sex groups (a standard housing system, but different from a natural situation). Then, two same-sex adults were introduced into each experimental group. Observations made before, during and after an introduction indicated that young horses reared in homogeneous groups of young had different behaviors compared to other domestic horses reared under more socially natural conditions. After the introduction...
Teaching animal handling to veterinary students at Massey University, New Zealand.
Journal of veterinary medical education    March 11, 2008   Volume 34, Issue 5 583-585 doi: 10.3138/jvme.34.5.583
Stafford KJ, Erceg VH.The veterinary program at the Institute of Veterinary, Animal and Biomedical Sciences, Massey University, New Zealand, is 4.5 years long. Animal handling and restraint are taught to first-year veterinary students via lectures and practical sessions. Students are taught to catch, restrain, and hold the five important domesticated species (horses, cattle, sheep, dogs, and cats) in a series of five practical sessions, each lasting about three hours. Safety is emphasized. Students are taught in groups of 10-12, and generally the tutors demonstrate the various techniques of restraint and then super...
Student training in large-animal handling at the School of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, Murdoch University, Australia.
Journal of veterinary medical education    March 11, 2008   Volume 34, Issue 5 576-582 doi: 10.3138/jvme.34.5.576
Chapman HM, Taylor EG, Buddle JR, Murphy DJ.The ability to handle animals safely, competently, and with confidence is an essential skill for veterinarians. Poor animal-handling skills are likely to compromise credibility, occupational health and safety, and animal welfare. In the five-year veterinary science degree at Murdoch University, animal handling is taught in a prerequisite unit in the second semester of the second year. From 2008, however, this unit will be taught in the first year of the five-year course. Students are taught to handle sheep, cattle, pigs, and horses safely and competently. Each student receives 30 hours of form...
Detection of Bartonella henselae in the blood of 2 adult horses.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    March 10, 2008   Volume 22, Issue 2 495-498 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.2008.0043.x
Jones SL, Maggi R, Shuler J, Alward A, Breitschwerdt EB.Bartonella spp. are emerging zoonotic agents that have been found in a wide variety of domestic animals and wildlife and cause a number of clinical syndromes. Bartonella sp. infection has been identified in a growing number of animal species, including cats, rodents, porpoises, and canids, but has not been reported in horses. Objective: To document the presence of Bartonella sp. in the blood of horses. Methods: One horse with chronic arthropathy and 1 horse with presumptive vasculitis. Methods: Blood samples were tested for the presence of Bartonella sp. by a combination of multiplex real-time...
Isolation of obligate anaerobic bacteria from ulcerative keratitis in domestic animals.
Veterinary ophthalmology    February 28, 2008   Volume 11, Issue 2 114-122 doi: 10.1111/j.1463-5224.2008.00610.x
Ledbetter EC, Scarlett JM.To determine the frequency of obligate anaerobic bacterial isolation from corneal samples of domestic animals with ulcerative keratitis and to characterize the historical, clinical, cytological, and microbiological features of culture-positive cases. Methods: Three hundred and thirty domestic animals with ulcerative keratitis. Methods: Anaerobic bacteriologic culture and Gram stain were performed on corneal samples from consecutive animals examined with suspect septic ulcerative keratitis. Additional corneal diagnostics included: aerobic bacteriologic culture for all species; fungal culture fo...
Pipped at the post.
Current biology : CB    February 23, 2008   Volume 18, Issue 2 R48 doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2007.12.036
Williams N.No abstract available
The horse genome derby: racing from map to whole genome sequence.
Chromosome research : an international journal on the molecular, supramolecular and evolutionary aspects of chromosome biology    February 16, 2008   Volume 16, Issue 1 109-127 doi: 10.1007/s10577-008-1204-z
Chowdhary BP, Raudsepp T.The map of the horse genome has undergone unprecedented expansion during the past six years. Beginning from a modest collection of approximately 300 mapped markers scattered on the 31 pairs of autosomes and the X chromosome in 2001, today the horse genome is among the best-mapped in domestic animals. Presently, high-resolution linearly ordered gene maps are available for all autosomes as well as the X and the Y chromosome. The approximately 4350 mapped markers distributed over the approximately 2.68 Gbp long equine genome provide on average 1 marker every 620 kb. Among the most remarkable deve...
Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus capsid protein inhibits nuclear import in Mammalian but not in mosquito cells.
Journal of virology    February 6, 2008   Volume 82, Issue 8 4028-4041 doi: 10.1128/JVI.02330-07
Atasheva S, Garmashova N, Frolov I, Frolova E.Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV) represents a continuous public health threat in the United States. It has the ability to cause fatal disease in humans and in horses and other domestic animals. We recently demonstrated that replicating VEEV interferes with cellular transcription and uses this phenomenon as a means of downregulating a cellular antiviral response. VEEV capsid protein was found to play a critical role in this process, and its approximately 35-amino-acid-long peptide, fused with green fluorescent protein, functioned as efficiently as did the entire capsid. We detected a...
Comprehension of human pointing gestures in horses (Equus caballus).
Animal cognition    February 5, 2008   Volume 11, Issue 3 457-466 doi: 10.1007/s10071-008-0136-5
Maros K, Gácsi M, Miklósi A.Twenty domestic horses (Equus caballus) were tested for their ability to rely on different human gesticular cues in a two-way object choice task. An experimenter hid food under one of two bowls and after baiting, indicated the location of the food to the subjects by using one of four different cues. Horses could locate the hidden reward on the basis of the distal dynamic-sustained, proximal momentary and proximal dynamic-sustained pointing gestures but failed to perform above chance level when the experimenter performed a distal momentary pointing gesture. The results revealed that horses coul...
Social feeding decisions in horses (Equus caballus).
Behavioural processes    January 20, 2008   Volume 78, Issue 1 76-83 doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2008.01.009
Krüger K, Flauger B.Like many other herbivores, in a natural environment equids feed on rather evenly distributed resources. However, the vegetation in their vast habitats constantly changes. If food is plentiful only little competition occurs over food, and in non-competitive situations domestic horses tend to return to the same feeding site until it is overgrazed. In contrast, they compete over limited food for which the social status of the individuals appears to be important. Especially in ruminants several studies have proved an influence of social organisations, rank, sex and the depletion of feeding sites ...
Horse sense: social status of horses (Equus caballus) affects their likelihood of copying other horses’ behavior.
Animal cognition    January 9, 2008   Volume 11, Issue 3 431-439 doi: 10.1007/s10071-007-0133-0
Krueger K, Heinze J.Animals that live in stable social groups need to gather information on their own relative position in the group's social hierarchy, by either directly threatening or by challenging others, or indirectly and in a less perilous manner , by observing interactions among others. Indirect inference of dominance relationships has previously been reported from primates, rats, birds, and fish. Here, we show that domestic horses, Equus caballus, are similarly capable of social cognition. Taking advantage of a specific "following behavior" that horses show towards humans in a riding arena, we investigat...
Historical perspectives on long distance transport of animals.
Veterinaria italiana    January 1, 2008   Volume 44, Issue 1 19-30 
Blancou J, Parsonson I.Since Roman Antiquity, domestic and wild animals have been transported over long distances for purposes as different as improvement of livestock production, food supply, scientific interest, public entertainment, war and numerous other purposes. This long distance transportation was originally limited to the Mediterranean area but, during the Middle Ages extended to the rest of Europe. The conquest of the New World was the first major occasion to transport large numbers of horses and other livestock across the oceans. Domestic animals were necessary for the new colonies and their armies. Europ...
A critical review of fear tests used on cattle, pigs, sheep, poultry and horses.
Physiology & behavior    November 30, 2007   Volume 92, Issue 3 340-374 doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2007.03.016
Forkman B, Boissy A, Meunier-Salaün MC, Canali E, Jones RB.Fear is arguably the most commonly investigated emotion in domestic animals. In the current review we attempt to establish the level of repeatability and validity found for fear tests used on cattle, pigs, sheep and goats, poultry and horses. We focus the review on the three most common types of fear tests: the arena test (open field), the novel object test, and the restraint test. For some tests, e.g. tonic immobility in poultry, there is a good and broad literature on factors that affect the outcome of the test, the validity of the test and its age dependency. However, there are comparativel...
Changes in gas composition and acid-base values of venous blood samples stored under different conditions in 4 domestic species.
Veterinary clinical pathology    November 29, 2007   Volume 36, Issue 4 358-360 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-165x.2007.tb00441.x
Piccione G, Bertolucci C, Grasso F, Guidice E.The effect of storage temperature and time on blood gas and acid-base values has been investigated intensively in cattle and dogs; however, data are lacking in other species. Objective: The aim of our study was to evaluate changes in gas composition and acid-base values in venous blood stored at different temperatures and for different times in 4 domestic species in Italy. Methods: Blood samples from Comisana sheep (n = 10), Maltese goats (n = 10), Ragusana donkeys (n = 10), and Thoroughbred horses (n = 10) were analyzed after storage at 23 degrees C (room temperature) for 15 minutes (group I)...
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