Analyze Diet

Topic:Ecology

The study of ecology and horses involves examining the interactions between horses and their environments, including both natural and managed ecosystems. This field explores how horses influence and are influenced by various ecological factors such as vegetation, soil, water sources, and other animal species. Research in this area may address topics such as the grazing behavior of horses, their impact on plant communities, and the role of horses in nutrient cycling within ecosystems. Additionally, studies may investigate the effects of environmental changes and human activities on horse populations and their habitats. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that analyze the ecological roles of horses, their interactions with ecosystems, and the implications for conservation and land management.
Dynamics of eastern equine encephalitis virus during the 2019 outbreak in the Northeast United States.
Current biology : CB    June 8, 2023   Volume 33, Issue 12 2515-2527.e6 doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.05.047
Hill V, Koch RT, Bialosuknia SM, Ngo K, Zink SD, Koetzner CA, Maffei JG, Dupuis AP, Backenson PB, Oliver J, Bransfield AB, Misencik MJ, Petruff TA....Eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV) causes a rare but severe disease in horses and humans and is maintained in an enzootic transmission cycle between songbirds and Culiseta melanura mosquitoes. In 2019, the largest EEEV outbreak in the United States for more than 50 years occurred, centered in the Northeast. To explore the dynamics of the outbreak, we sequenced 80 isolates of EEEV and combined them with existing genomic data. We found that, similar to previous years, cases were driven by multiple independent but short-lived virus introductions into the Northeast from Florida. Once in the ...
A novel kinetic energy harvesting system for lifetime deployments of wildlife trackers.
PloS one    May 17, 2023   Volume 18, Issue 5 e0285930 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0285930
Gregersen T, Wild TA, Havmøller LW, Møller PR, Lenau TA, Wikelski M, Havmøller RW.Wildlife tracking devices are key in obtaining detailed insights on movement, animal migration, natal dispersal, home-ranges, resource use and group dynamics of free-roaming animals. Despite a wide use of such devices, tracking for entire lifetimes is still a considerable challenge for most animals, mainly due to technological limitations. Deploying battery powered wildlife tags on smaller animals is limited by the mass of the devices. Micro-sized devices with solar panels sometimes solve this challenge, however, nocturnal species or animals living under low light conditions render solar cells...
Out of the stable: Social disruption and concurrent shifts in the feral mare (Equus caballus) fecal microbiota.
Ecology and evolution    May 11, 2023   Volume 13, Issue 5 e10079 doi: 10.1002/ece3.10079
Vaziri GJ, Jones MM, Carr HA, Nuñez CMV.The disruption of animals' symbiotic bacterial communities (their microbiota) has been associated with myriad factors including changes to the diet, hormone levels, and various stressors. The maintenance of healthy bacterial communities may be especially challenging for social species as their microbiotas are also affected by group membership, social relationships, microbial transfer between individuals, and social stressors such as increased competition and rank maintenance. We investigated the effects of increased social instability, as determined by the number of group changes made by femal...
Comparison of Trap and Equine Attraction to Mosquitoes.
Insects    April 11, 2023   Volume 14, Issue 4 374 doi: 10.3390/insects14040374
Dilling SC, TenBroeck SH, Hogsette JA, Kline DL.Mosquitoes are pests of horses, but mosquito trap efficacy data, especially the ability of traps to protect horses, are lacking. Studies were conducted to investigate the comparative attraction between traps and horses, increase trap attraction by adding horse odors to the airstream of a trap, determine the spatial distribution of adult mosquitoes, estimate the numbers of mosquitoes feeding on horses, determine the relative attraction of horses to mosquitoes, and estimate the range of mosquitoes' attraction between two horses. When a horse and a mosquito trap were placed 3.5 m apart, there was...
Early dispersal of domestic horses into the Great Plains and northern Rockies.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    March 30, 2023   Volume 379, Issue 6639 1316-1323 doi: 10.1126/science.adc9691
Taylor WTT, Librado P, American Horse CJ, Shield Chief Gover C, Arterberry J, Afraid of Bear-Cook AL, Left Heron H, Yellow Hair RM, Gonzalez M....The horse is central to many Indigenous cultures across the American Southwest and the Great Plains. However, when and how horses were first integrated into Indigenous lifeways remain contentious, with extant models derived largely from colonial records. We conducted an interdisciplinary study of an assemblage of historic archaeological horse remains, integrating genomic, isotopic, radiocarbon, and paleopathological evidence. Archaeological and modern North American horses show strong Iberian genetic affinities, with later influx from British sources, but no Viking proximity. Horses rapidly sp...
The Social and Reproductive Challenges Faced by Free-Roaming Horse (Equus caballus) Stallions.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    March 24, 2023   Volume 13, Issue 7 1151 doi: 10.3390/ani13071151
Górecka-Bruzda A, Jaworska J, Stanley CR.In captivity, intact male horses, due to their sexual drive, are usually socially isolated from other horses. This lifestyle strongly contrasts with that experienced by horses living in free-roaming, feral, or semi-feral conditions, where adult stallions have several roles in their social group, with successful reproduction being their primary drive. Reproductive skew in wild populations is high; many stallions will fail to reproduce at all, while others achieve high levels of reproductive success, siring a large number of foals. Successful stallions are those with particular characteristics a...
Why don’t horseflies land on zebras?
The Journal of experimental biology    February 17, 2023   Volume 226, Issue 4 jeb244778 doi: 10.1242/jeb.244778
Caro T, Fogg E, Stephens-Collins T, Santon M, How MJ.Stripes deter horseflies (tabanids) from landing on zebras and, while several mechanisms have been proposed, these hypotheses have yet to be tested satisfactorily. Here, we investigated three possible visual mechanisms that could impede successful tabanid landings (aliasing, contrast and polarization) but additionally explored pattern element size employing video footage of horseflies around differently patterned coats placed on domestic horses. We found that horseflies are averse to landing on highly but not on lightly contrasting stripes printed on horse coats. We could find no evidence for ...
Contrasting seasonal patterns in diet and dung-associated invertebrates of feral cattle and horses in a rewilding area.
Molecular ecology    February 6, 2023   Volume 32, Issue 8 2071-2091 doi: 10.1111/mec.16847
Thomassen EE, Sigsgaard EE, Jensen MR, Olsen K, Hansen MDD, Svenning JC, Thomsen PF.Trophic rewilding is increasingly applied in restoration efforts, with the aim of reintroducing the ecological functions provided by large-bodied mammals and thereby promote self-regulating, biodiverse ecosystems. However, empirical evidence for the effects of megafauna introductions on the abundance and richness of other organisms such as plants and invertebrates, and the mechanisms involved still need strengthening. In this study, we use environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding of dung from co-existing feral cattle and horses to assess the seasonal variation in plant diet and dung-associated a...
The Amelioration of Grazing through Physiological Integration by a Clonal Dune Plant.
Plants (Basel, Switzerland)    February 6, 2023   Volume 12, Issue 4 724 doi: 10.3390/plants12040724
Evans JP, Meckstroth S, Garai J.Rhizomatous growth and associated physiological integration can allow a clonal dune species to potentially compensate for the selective removal of leaves associated with herbivory. is a rhizomatous clonal plant species that is abundant in the coastal dune environments of the southeastern United States that are inhabited by large feral horse populations. has been shown to integrate resources among ramets within extensive clones as an adaptation to resource heterogeneity in sandy soils. In this study, we hypothesized that clonal integration is a mechanism that promotes persistence in these co...
Show me your best side: Lateralization of social and resting behaviors in feral horses.
Behavioural processes    February 2, 2023   Volume 206 104839 doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2023.104839
da Cruz AB, Hirata S, Dos Santos ME, Mendonça RS.Growing evidence shows a variety of sensorial and motor asymmetries in social and non-social interactions in various species, indicating a lateralized processing of information by the brain. Using digital video cameras on tripods and drones, this study investigated lateralization in frequency and duration of social behavior patterns, in affiliative, agonistic, and resting contexts, in a feral population of horses (Equus ferus caballus) in Northern Portugal, consisting of 37 individuals organized in eight harem groups. Affiliative interactions (including grooming) were more often performed, and...
Arboviruses in Mammals in the Neotropics: A Systematic Review to Strengthen Epidemiological Monitoring Strategies and Conservation Medicine.
Viruses    February 1, 2023   Volume 15, Issue 2 417 doi: 10.3390/v15020417
García-Romero C, Carrillo Bilbao GA, Navarro JC, Martin-Solano S, Saegerman C.Arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses) are a diverse group of ribonucleic acid (RNA) viruses, with the exception of African swine fever virus, that are transmitted by hematophagous arthropods to a vertebrate host. They are the important cause of many diseases due to their ability to spread in different environments and their diversity of vectors. Currently, there is no information on the geographical distribution of the diseases because the routes of transmission and the mammals (wild or domestic) that act as potential hosts are poorly documented or unknown. We conducted a systematic review fro...
Sustainability and the Thoroughbred Breeding and Racing Industries: An Enhanced One Welfare Perspective.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    January 31, 2023   Volume 13, Issue 3 490 doi: 10.3390/ani13030490
Stallones L, McManus P, McGreevy P.As society debates the use of animals in sport, entertainment, and leisure, there is an increasing focus on the welfare, social, and ecological impacts of such activities on the animals, human participants, people close to them, and the physical environment. This article introduces the "Enhanced One Welfare Framework" to reveal significant costs and benefits associated with Thoroughbred breeding and racing globally. In addition, relative to calls to ban horseracing and similar activities as part of sustainability approaches that focus chiefly on animals, the "Enhanced One Welfare Framework" is...
Species interactions, stability, and resilience of the gut microbiota – Helminth assemblage in horses.
iScience    January 25, 2023   Volume 26, Issue 2 106044 doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.106044
Boisseau M, Dhorne-Pollet S, Bars-Cortina D, Courtot É, Serreau D, Annonay G, Lluch J, Gesbert A, Reigner F, Sallé G, Mach N.The nature and strength of interactions entertained among helminths and their host gut microbiota remain largely unexplored. Using 40 naturally infected Welsh ponies, we tracked the gut microbiota-cyathostomin temporal dynamics and stability before and following anthelmintic treatment and the associated host blood transcriptomic response. High shedders harbored 14 species of cyathostomins, dominated by . They exhibited a highly diverse and temporal dynamic gut microbiota, with butyrate-producing Clostridia likely driving the ecosystem steadiness and host tolerance toward cyathostomins infectio...
Gut microbial community structure and function of Przewalski’s horses varied across reintroduced sites in China.
Integrative zoology    January 6, 2023   doi: 10.1111/1749-4877.12699
Tang L, Yan L, Jia H, Xiong Y, Ma X, Chu H, Sun Z, Wang L, Shalitanati M, Li K, Hu D, Zhang D.Host-associated microbiota can significantly impact host fitness. Therefore, naturally occurring variations in microbiota may influence the health and persistence of their hosts. This finding is particularly important in reintroduced animals, as they typically experience habitat changes during translocations. However, little is known about how microbiomes are altered in response to conservation translocation. Here, we accessed the gut microbiome of Przewalski's horse (Equus przewalskii) populations in China from three nature reserves (i.e. Xinjiang Kalamaili Nature Reserve, KNR; Dunhuang Xihu ...
Developmental dynamics and survival characteristics of the common horse bot flies (Diptera, Gasterophilidae, Gasterophilus) in desert steppe.
Veterinary parasitology    January 6, 2023   Volume 315 109870 doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2023.109870
Zhang K, Ju Z, Zhang Y, Wang C, Mubalake S, Hu D, Zhang D, Li K, Chu H.The genus Gasterophilus (Diptera, Gastrophilidae) is an obligate parasite of the equine family that causes widespread myiasis in desert steppe. Based on four common naturally excreted Gasterophilus larvae collected systematically in the Karamaili Ungulate Nature Reserve from March to September 2021, this paper studies the population dynamics and ontogenetic laws of horse flies, and discuss the coexistence pattern and population dynamics prediction of horse flies. The results showed that the Gasterophilus larvae had obvious concentrated development period, and the time of population peaks was d...
Prevalence of different tick species on livestock and associated equines and canine from different agro-ecological zones of Pakistan.
Frontiers in veterinary science    January 6, 2023   Volume 9 1089999 doi: 10.3389/fvets.2022.1089999
Hussain N, Shabbir RMK, Ahmed H, Afzal MS, Ullah S, Ali A, Irum S, Naqvi SK, Yin J, Cao J.Ticks are ectoparasites that act as vectors for transmission of various pathogens to wild and domesticated animals and pose a serious threat to human health. Because of the hot and humid conditions in different agro-ecological zones of Pakistan, ticks are abundant and parasitize a variety of animals. The aim of this study was to identify different tick species and distribution on different hosts especially livestock, such as sheep, goat, cattle, buffalo, and camel, and livestock associated canines and equines, such as horse, donkey, and dog, across different agro-ecological zones of Pakistan. ...
Blood feeding patterns of the Culex pipiens complex in equestrian land uses and their implications for arboviral encephalitis risk in temperate Argentina.
Zoonoses and public health    December 27, 2022   Volume 70, Issue 3 256-268 doi: 10.1111/zph.13021
Cardo MV, Carbajo AE, Mozzoni C, Kliger M, Vezzani D.Blood feeding patterns of mosquitoes are a key component in the dynamics of arboviral encephalitides transmission. In temperate Argentina, the members of the Culex pipiens complex include Cx. pipiens molestus, Cx. quinquefasciatus and their hybrids. To characterize their blood feeding patterns, adult resting mosquitoes were collected monthly during the warm season in urban and rural equestrian fields. The availability of birds and domestic mammals per site was characterized. The blood source and the complex member were successfully identified for 89 specimens using PCR. Blood of 19 vertebrate ...
Garrano Horses Perceive Letters of the Alphabet on a Touchscreen System: A Pilot Study.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    December 12, 2022   Volume 12, Issue 24 3514 doi: 10.3390/ani12243514
Schubert CL, Ryckewaert B, Pereira C, Matsuzawa T.This study aimed to use a computer-controlled touchscreen system to examine visual discrimination in Garrano horses (), an endangered breed of pony belonging to the Iberian horse family. This pilot study focused on the perceptual similarity among letters of the alphabet. We tested five horses in a one-male unit (OMU) living permanently in a semi-free enclosure near their natural habitat in Serra d'Arga, northern Portugal. Horses were trained to nose-touch black circles that appeared on the screen. Then, they were tested for discrimination of five letters of the Latin alphabet in Arial font, na...
Tabanidae (Diptera) captured on horses in Amazon Forest fragments of the state of Rondônia, Brazil.
Acta tropica    October 29, 2022   Volume 237 106734 doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2022.106734
Zamarchi TBO, Henriques AL, Krolow TK, Krüger RF, Rodrigues GD, Munari A, Pessoa FAC, Camargo ELMA.Tabanidae is one of the most diverse families of hematophagous dipterans. Tabanids, in general, are mechanical vectors of some pathogens. Given the vector importance and the lack of knowledge of the tabanid fauna in horses in Amazon Forest fragments of the state of Rondônia, this work aimed to determine the season that the different species of horse flies prefer to carryout hematophagy on horses and verify whether the horse fly community remains the same throughout the year. The sampling areas for tabanid captures were in the municipality of Monte Negro, Western Amazon, Brazil. Four new occur...
Assessment of Adaptation Status of Reintroduced Equus Przewalskii Based on Comparative Analysis of Fecal Bacteria with Those of Captive E. Przewalskii, Domestic Horse and Mongolian Wild Ass.
Animals : an open access journal from MDPI    October 21, 2022   Volume 12, Issue 20 doi: 10.3390/ani12202874
Hu D, Wang C, Ente M, Zhang K, Zhang D, Li X, Li K, Chu H.Intestinal microbiota play an important role in the survival of the host. However, no study to date has elucidated the adjustment of intestinal microbiota of the host during rewilding. Thus, this study aims to describe the intestinal bacterial community of reintroduced Przewalski’s horse (RPH) after being released into their original habitat for approximately 20 years in comparison with that of captive Przewalski’s horse (CPH), sympatric domestic horse (DH) and Mongolian wild ass (MWA) by sequencing the 16S rRNA gene. The results showed that the prevalent bacterial communities were differe...
Animal board invited review: Grassland-based livestock farming and biodiversity.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    October 21, 2022   Volume 16, Issue 12 100671 doi: 10.1016/j.animal.2022.100671
Fraser MD, Vallin HE, Roberts BP.Grasslands dominate land cover nationally and globally, and their composition, structure and habitat value are strongly influenced by the actions of domestic and wild grazing animals that feed on them. Different pastures are characterised by varying opportunities for selective feeding by livestock; agronomically improved, sown swards generally consist of a limited range of plant species whereas longer-term leys and semi-natural grasslands are characterised by a more diverse mixture of plants. In the case of botanically diverse permanent pastures/grazing lands, the dietary preferences of differ...
COP27 Climate Change Conference: Urgent action needed for Africa and the world.
Equine veterinary journal    October 18, 2022   Volume 55, Issue 1 9-11 doi: 10.1111/evj.13882
Atwoli L, Erhabor GE, Gbakima AA, Haileamlak A, Ntumba JK, Kigera J, Laybourn-Langton L, Mash B, Muhia J, Mulaudzi FM, Ofori-Adjei D, Okonofua F....No abstract available
A One Health view of the West Nile virus outbreak in Andalusia (Spain) in 2020.
Emerging microbes & infections    October 11, 2022   Volume 11, Issue 1 2570-2578 doi: 10.1080/22221751.2022.2134055
Figuerola J, Jiménez-Clavero MÁ, Ruíz-López MJ, Llorente F, Ruiz S, Hoefer A, Aguilera-Sepúlveda P, Jiménez-Peñuela J, García-Ruiz O....Reports of West Nile virus (WNV) associated disease in humans were scarce in Spain until summer 2020, when 77 cases were reported, eight fatal. Most cases occurred next to the Guadalquivir River in the Sevillian villages of Puebla del Río and Coria del Río. Detection of WNV disease in humans was preceded by a large increase in the abundance of in the neighbourhood of the villages where most human cases occurred. The first WNV infected mosquitoes were captured approximately one month before the detection of the first human cases. Overall, 33 positive pools of and one pool of were found. Se...
Following the niche: the differential impact of the last glacial maximum on four European ungulates.
Communications biology    September 29, 2022   Volume 5, Issue 1 1038 doi: 10.1038/s42003-022-03993-7
Leonardi M, Boschin F, Boscato P, Manica A.Predicting the effects of future global changes on species requires a better understanding of the ecological niche dynamics in response to climate; the large climatic fluctuations of the last 50,000 years can be used as a natural experiment to that aim. Here we test whether the realized niche of horse, aurochs, red deer, and wild boar changed between 47,000 and 7500 years ago using paleoecological modelling over an extensive archaeological database. We show that they all changed their niche, with species-specific responses to climate fluctuations. We also suggest that they survived the climati...
Shallow shotgun sequencing of the microbiome recapitulates 16S amplicon results and provides functional insights.
Molecular ecology resources    September 26, 2022   Volume 23, Issue 3 549-564 doi: 10.1111/1755-0998.13713
Stothart MR, McLoughlin PD, Poissant J.Prevailing 16S rRNA gene-amplicon methods for characterizing the bacterial microbiome of wildlife are economical, but result in coarse taxonomic classifications, are subject to primer and 16S copy number biases, and do not allow for direct estimation of microbiome functional potential. While deep shotgun metagenomic sequencing can overcome many of these limitations, it is prohibitively expensive for large sample sets. Here we evaluated the ability of shallow shotgun metagenomic sequencing to characterize taxonomic and functional patterns in the faecal microbiome of a model population of feral ...
Non-native grazers affect physiological and demographic responses of greater sage-grouse.
Ecology and evolution    September 20, 2022   Volume 12, Issue 9 e9325 doi: 10.1002/ece3.9325
Behnke T, Street P, Davies S, Ouyang JQ, Sedinger JS.Non-native ungulate grazing has negatively impacted native species across the globe, leading to massive loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services. Despite their pervasiveness, interactions between non-native grazers and native species are not fully understood. We often observe declines in demography or survival of these native species, but lack understanding about the mechanisms underlying these declines. Physiological stress represents one mechanism of (mal)adaptation, but data are sparse. We investigated glucocorticoid levels in a native avian herbivore exposed to different intensities of ...
Spatiotemporal Environmental Drivers of Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus in Central Florida: Towards a Predictive Model for a Lethal Disease.
Journal of medical entomology    August 13, 2022   Volume 59, Issue 5 1805-1816 doi: 10.1093/jme/tjac113
Mundis SJ, Harrison S, Pelley D, Durand S, Ryan SJ.Eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV) is a mosquito-borne virus that affects humans and horses, with a high case fatality rate in both species. The virus can be transmitted by several mosquito species and maintained in multiple reservoir hosts, making EEEV dynamics difficult to anticipate. In this study, we identified spatial and temporal factors that precede EEEV detection using sentinel chicken surveillance data from Orange County, Florida, from 2003 to 2017. We first examined the land cover and mosquito species composition associated with sentinel chicken sites. We then fit distributed l...
An analysis of the annual mobility of Polish Konik horses depending on habitat, season, and time of the day.
Archives animal breeding    July 12, 2022   Volume 65, Issue 3 239-247 doi: 10.5194/aab-65-239-2022
Pikuła R, Zaborski D, Grzesiak W, Smugała M.The aim of the present study was to analyse the mobility of Polish Konik horses in their natural environment. The study was conducted on a herd of 15 Polish Konik horses in 2018. The Global Positioning System (GPS) transmitter was used to track the horses' movements. Two habitats (forest and meadows), four seasons (autumn, winter, spring, and summer), and four times of the day (morning, midday, evening, and night) were distinguished. Season, habitat, and time of the day as well as the interaction among them significantly ( p < 0.0001 ) affected the mobility of Polish Konik horses. The use of ...
Host feces, olfactory beacon guiding aggregation of intestinal parasites Gasterophilus pecorum (Diptera: Gasterophilidae).
Parasitology research    July 5, 2022   Volume 121, Issue 9 2601-2613 doi: 10.1007/s00436-022-07577-6
Zhang K, Zhou R, Huang H, Ma W, Qi Y, Li B, Zhang D, Li K, Chu H.The aim of this study was to identify the aggregation sites and transmission characteristics of Gasterophilus pecorum, the dominant pathogen of endangered equines in desert steppe. Therefore, we tested with a four-arm olfactometer the olfactory response of the G. pecorum adults to the odors that have a great impact on their life cycle, and also investigated the occurrence sites of the adults in the area where the Przewalski's horse (Equus przewalskii) roam frequently during the peak period of G. pecorum infection. The results of four-directional olfactory test showed that the fresh horse feces...
Contrasting Volatilomes of Livestock Dung Drive Preference of the Dung Beetle Bubas bison (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae).
Molecules (Basel, Switzerland)    June 28, 2022   Volume 27, Issue 13 4152 doi: 10.3390/molecules27134152
Perera NN, Weston PA, Barrow RA, Weston LA, Gurr GM.Volatile cues can play a significant role in the location and discrimination of food resources by insects. Dung beetles have been reported to discriminate among dung types produced by different species, thereby exhibiting behavioral preferences. However, the role of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in dung localization and preference remains largely unexplored in dung beetles. Here we performed several studies: firstly, cage olfactometer bioassays were performed to evaluate the behavioral responses of (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) to VOCs emanating from fresh horse, sheep, and cattle dung; seco...