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.
Mendes J, Aymée L, Lilenbaum W.Leptospirosis, caused by spp., affects multiple domestic species and can result in significant economic and public health impacts. This scoping review, conducted following the PRISMA 2020 guidelines, searched PubMed, SciELO, and Scopus for original studies that described complete therapeutic protocols (including dose, duration, and confirmed diagnosis) in dogs, cats, cattle, pigs, horses, sheep, and goats. Thirty-five studies met the criteria: 14 (40%) in cattle, 7 (20%) in swine, 2 (5.7%) in small ruminants, 7 (20%) in dogs and cats, and 5 (14.3%) in horses. In livestock, streptomycin monoth...
Pfannkuche H, Maus J, Engel KM, Schiller J, Schneider MR.Skin sebaceous glands (SGs) synthesize and secrete sebum, a mixture of lipids and cellular debris that defends the external body surface against physicochemical challenges. Recent data define the SG as a dynamic entity with potential functions beyond skin protection, including immunomodulatory actions and the regulation of energy metabolism. We postulate that the SG also has important, unrecognized roles in physiological and pathological processes in domestic animals. Conversely, data derived from domestic animals may have translational relevance for humans. This review article summarizes SG s...
Nehme-Haily J, Yin L, Diaz V, Lin D, Hu DL.Seventy percent of mammals copulate using repeated pelvic thrusting, while the transfer of sperm requires just a single intromission. Why did thrusting evolve to be the dominant form of sexual intercourse? In this study, we investigate how the rate of sexual pelvic thrusting changes with body size. By analyzing films of copulating mammals, from mice Mus musculus to elephants Elephantidae, we find that bigger animals thrust slower. The rate of pelvic thrusting decreases from 6 Hz for the pocket mouse Pergonathus to 1.3-1.8 Hz for humans to an absence of thrusting for the rhino Rhinocerotidae an...
Asteraye GB, Jobling R, Jemberu WT, Pinchbeck G, Knight-Jones TJD, Critchlow R, Rushton J, Chaters GL.Working donkeys play a critical role in transportation, agriculture and household resilience in low- and middle-income countries. Other animals that are kept for production purposes, such as cattle, are often grouped into broad production system classes, such as dairy or pastoral, for comparison between and better understanding of the needs and outputs of animals within specific sectors. Despite the importance of working donkeys for sustaining livelihoods there are no systematic classifications of these populations. The aim of this study was to classify and characterise donkey systems in Ethio...
Carvalho RPR, Silva KDP, Ramirez-Lopez CJ, Guimarães-Ervilha LO, Lima TI, Teixeira-Soares CM, de Azevedo Viana AG, Ribeiro IM, Morais-Santos M....Infertility is a global concern in both humans and domestic animals, with male factors accounting for nearly half of all cases. Among male reproductive structures, the efferent ductules play a crucial but understudied role in fertility. These tubules connect the testis to the epididymis and are primarily responsible for luminal fluid reabsorption, a process essential for sperm concentration, maturation, and transport. This study aimed to provide a comparative morphological and histological characterization of the efferent ductules in four species-rats, bulls, stallions, and boars-focusing on r...
Bland J, McGowan C, Bush E, Lloyd V.Zoonotic diseases have major impacts on human and animal health, as well as being ecologically significant. Lyme Borreliosis or Lyme disease, caused by infection by pathogenic members of the Borrelia genus, is among these zoonotic diseases. Serology is one of the most accessible means for indirect surveillance of pathogen presence by monitoring the presence, abundance, and type of immune response to the pathogen or pathogen-associated epitopes. Serological surveillance of wild animals is important as wild animals are the primary reservoirs of many zoonotic diseases. Similarly, serological sur...
Brown JE, Noormohammadi AH, Courtman NF.Commercially available D-dimer assays use antibodies against human D-dimer, with limited sensitivity and specificity data in companion animals. Objective: To evaluate the immunoreactivity of D-dimer in plasma of dogs, horses, and cats with commercially available antibodies to human D-dimer. Methods: Plasma samples were collected from healthy dogs and horses, and from surplus feline plasma submitted for diagnostic purposes. Methods: Descriptive research study. A cross-linked fibrin lysate was prepared from plasma samples, and SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting were performed with a variety of commerci...