Analyze Diet

Topic:Ecosystem

The interaction between horses and their ecosystems encompasses the various ways in which horses influence and are influenced by their natural environments. Horses can impact vegetation patterns, soil composition, and biodiversity through their grazing behaviors and movement. Their presence can alter the structure of plant communities, affect nutrient cycling, and contribute to habitat modification. Conversely, environmental factors such as climate, terrain, and available resources shape horse behavior, health, and population dynamics. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the ecological roles of horses, their interactions with other species, and the environmental factors that affect equine populations.
Green treasures: Investigating the biodiversity potential of equine yards through the presence and quality of landscape features in the Netherlands.
PloS one    April 11, 2024   Volume 19, Issue 4 e0301168 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0301168
Wolframm IA, Heric L, Allen AM.At a time of mounting ecological crises and biodiversity loss, there is an urgent need for nature-based solutions. Equestrian properties cover a considerable proportion of the European rural and peri-urban landscape and provide much potential for integrating ecosystem services, such as the inclusion of small landscape features. The aim of this study was to investigate the presence and quality of landscape features (LF) to help determine how the equine sector can contribute to the agro-ecological transition. Using a citizen science approach, 87 commercial and 420 private yard owners reported th...
Diet modulates strongyle infection and microbiota in the large intestine of horses.
PloS one    April 9, 2024   Volume 19, Issue 4 e0301920 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0301920
Laroche N, Grimm P, Julliand S, Sorci G.The use of anthelminthic drugs has several drawbacks, including the selection of resistant parasite strains. Alternative avenues to mitigate the negative effects of helminth infection involve dietary interventions that might affect resistance and/or tolerance by improving host immunity, modulating the microbiota, or exerting direct anthelmintic effects. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of diet on strongyle infection in horses, specifically through immune-mediated, microbiota-mediated, or direct anthelmintic effects. Horses that were naturally infected with strongyles were fed eit...
Managing multi-functional peri-urban landscapes: Impacts of horse-keeping on water quality.
Ambio    November 16, 2023   Volume 53, Issue 3 452-469 doi: 10.1007/s13280-023-01955-9
Kumblad L, Petersson M, Aronsson H, Dinnétz P, Norberg L, Winqvist C, Rydin E, Hammer M.Eutrophication assessments in water management to quantify nutrient loads and identify mitigating measures seldom include the contribution from horse facilities. This may be due to lack of appropriate methods, limited resources, or the belief that the impact from horses is insignificant. However, the recreational horse sector is growing, predominantly in multi-functional peri-urban landscapes. We applied an ecosystem management approach to quantify nutrient loads from horse facilities in the Stockholm Region, Sweden. We found that horses increased the total loads with 30-40% P and 20-45% N, wi...
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...
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 ...
Impact of Horse Grazing on Floristic Diversity in Mediterranean Small Standing-Water Ecosystems (SWEs).
Plants (Basel, Switzerland)    June 17, 2022   Volume 11, Issue 12 1597 doi: 10.3390/plants11121597
Fenu G, Melis A, Pinna MS, Loi MC, Calderisi G, Cogoni D. (SWEs), despite their pivotal ecological role due to their participation in hydrogeological processes and their richness in biodiversity, seem to be often overlooked by the scientific community. In this study, the vascular plant diversity in some representative SWEs, that host a peculiar assemblage of plant and animal species, was investigated in relation to the disturbance effects of a wild horse population. A total of 50 plots, equally distributed in small and large SWEs, were surveyed and a level of disturbance was attributed to each plot. We found greater species richness in small and und...
Collapse of the mammoth-steppe in central Yukon as revealed by ancient environmental DNA.
Nature communications    December 8, 2021   Volume 12, Issue 1 7120 doi: 10.1038/s41467-021-27439-6
Murchie TJ, Monteath AJ, Mahony ME, Long GS, Cocker S, Sadoway T, Karpinski E, Zazula G, MacPhee RDE, Froese D, Poinar HN.The temporal and spatial coarseness of megafaunal fossil records complicates attempts to to disentangle the relative impacts of climate change, ecosystem restructuring, and human activities associated with the Late Quaternary extinctions. Advances in the extraction and identification of ancient DNA that was shed into the environment and preserved for millennia in sediment now provides a way to augment discontinuous palaeontological assemblages. Here, we present a 30,000-year sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) record derived from loessal permafrost silts in the Klondike region of Yukon, Canada. ...
Equids engineer desert water availability.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    May 1, 2021   Volume 372, Issue 6541 491-495 doi: 10.1126/science.abd6775
Lundgren EJ, Ramp D, Stromberg JC, Wu J, Nieto NC, Sluk M, Moeller KT, Wallach AD.Megafauna play important roles in the biosphere, yet little is known about how they shape dryland ecosystems. We report on an overlooked form of ecosystem engineering by donkeys and horses. In the deserts of North America, digging of ≤2-meter wells to groundwater by feral equids increased the density of water features, reduced distances between waters, and, at times, provided the only water present. Vertebrate richness and activity were higher at equid wells than at adjacent dry sites, and, by mimicking flood disturbance, equid wells became nurseries for riparian trees. Our results suggest t...
Hooves on the Beach; Horses Disrupt the Sand Matrix and Might Alter Invertebrate Assemblages on Beaches.
Environmental management    January 18, 2021   Volume 67, Issue 2 398-411 doi: 10.1007/s00267-020-01409-y
Evans-Clay M, Porch N, Maguire G, Weston MA.Beaches are under increasing pressure from a wide range of anthropogenic threats, including human trampling, vehicular crushing, and horse riding/training. The impacts of horses on beaches are unknown. We index the relative abundance, diversity and assemblage composition of beach invertebrates at paired sites with and without horses at nine beaches (locations) across Victoria, Australia. Horses were more common at sites where they were allowed and sites (horse versus no horse) within beaches were well matched, having similar slope, seaweed coverage, human and dog activity-attributes which vari...
Experimental rewilding may restore abandoned wood-pastures if policy allows.
Ambio    March 9, 2020   Volume 50, Issue 1 101-112 doi: 10.1007/s13280-020-01320-0
Garrido P, Edenius L, Mikusiński G, Skarin A, Jansson A, Thulin CG.Large herbivores play key roles in terrestrial ecosystems. Continuous defaunation processes have produced cascade effects on plant community composition, vegetation structure, and even climate. Wood-pastures were created by traditional management practices that have maintained open structures and biodiversity for millennia. In Europe, despite the broad recognition of their biological importance, such landscapes are declining due to land-use changes. This calls for finding urgent solutions for wood-pasture conservation. To test whether introducing an ecological replacement of an extinct wild ho...
Challenges on the conservation of traditional orchards: Tree damage as an indicator of sustainable grazing.
Journal of environmental management    December 23, 2019   Volume 257 110010 doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.110010
López-Sánchez A, Perea R, Roig S, Isselstein J, Schmitz A.Traditional orchard meadows are among the most valuable cultural and agricultural systems for nature conservation in Europe. They comprise scattered fruit trees over a highly diverse herbaceous layer and provide a wide range of ecosystem services. However, they are strongly endangered due to farmland intensification and abandonment. Livestock grazing is known to promote grassland diversity but it may also cause tree damage through debarking. In this study, we evaluated the effect of different grazers (cattle, horse and sheep) on fruit trees in 42 traditional orchards of the Rhenish uplands (Ge...
Using Different Grazing Practices for Increasing Plant Biodiversity in the Dykes and Embankments Along the Rhône River (Southern France).
Environmental management    September 29, 2016   Volume 58, Issue 6 984-997 doi: 10.1007/s00267-016-0744-9
Moinardeau C, Mesléard F, Dutoit T.Extensive grazing by domestic herbivores is a widespread management practice used since the 80s in many European agro-ecosystems such as semi-natural grasslands to maintain open habitats and to enhance biodiversity. Such grazing systems have principally been tested in cultural ecosystems of high nature value threatened by grazing abandonment. However, there have been few case studies of grazing management in very anthropized ecosystems, such as the new ecosystems created by urban or industrial conversions. In Southern France, the Rhône channeling for navigation and electricity production gene...
Patch-scale effects of equine disturbance on arthropod assemblages and vegetation structure in subalpine wetlands.
Environmental management    April 9, 2014   Volume 53, Issue 6 1109-1118 doi: 10.1007/s00267-014-0266-2
Holmquist JG, Schmidt-Gengenbach J, Ballenger EA.Assessments of vertebrate disturbance to plant and animal assemblages often contrast grazed versus ungrazed meadows or other larger areas of usage, and this approach can be powerful. Random sampling of such habitats carries the potential, however, for smaller, more intensely affected patches to be missed and for other responses that are only revealed at smaller scales to also escape detection. We instead sampled arthropod assemblages and vegetation structure at the patch scale (400-900 m(2) patches) within subalpine wet meadows of Yosemite National Park (USA), with the goal of determining if t...
Adapting to climate change on Western public lands: addressing the ecological effects of domestic, wild, and feral ungulates.
Environmental management    November 15, 2012   Volume 51, Issue 2 474-491 doi: 10.1007/s00267-012-9964-9
Beschta RL, Donahue DL, DellaSala DA, Rhodes JJ, Karr JR, O'Brien MH, Fleischner TL, Deacon Williams C.Climate change affects public land ecosystems and services throughout the American West and these effects are projected to intensify. Even if greenhouse gas emissions are reduced, adaptation strategies for public lands are needed to reduce anthropogenic stressors of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems and to help native species and ecosystems survive in an altered environment. Historical and contemporary livestock production-the most widespread and long-running commercial use of public lands-can alter vegetation, soils, hydrology, and wildlife species composition and abundances in ways that exa...
Ancient feeding ecology inferred from stable isotopic evidence from fossil horses in South America over the past 3 Ma.
BMC ecology    June 14, 2011   Volume 11 15 doi: 10.1186/1472-6785-11-15
Prado JL, Sánchez B, Alberdi MT.Stable isotope ratios (13C/12C and 18O/16O) in fossil teeth and bone provide key archives for understanding the ecology of extinct horses during the Plio-Pleistocene in South America; however, what happened in areas of sympatry between Equus (Amerhippus) and Hippidion is less understood. Results: Here, we use stable carbon and oxygen isotopes preserved in 67 fossil tooth and bone samples for seven species of horses from 25 different localities to document the magnitude of the dietary shifts of horses and ancient floral change during the Plio-Pleistocene. Dietary reconstructions inferred from s...
Historical thoughts on influenza viral ecosystems, or behold a pale horse, dead dogs, failing fowl, and sick swine.
Influenza and other respiratory viruses    October 21, 2010   Volume 4, Issue 6 327-337 doi: 10.1111/j.1750-2659.2010.00148.x
Morens DM, Taubenberger JK.To understand human influenza in a historical context of viral circulation in avian species, mammals, and in the environment. Methods: Historical review. Methods: Global events in a variety of circumstances over more than 3,000 years time. Methods: Comprehensive review of the historical literature including all major publications on pandemic and panzootic influenza. Methods: Influenza pandemics, panzootics, major epidemics and epizootics, and instances of interspecies transmission of influenza A. Results: Extensive documentation of human and animal influenza over many centuries suggests that i...
[Oostvaardersplassen].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    January 22, 2010   Volume 134, Issue 21 903-904 
Bander te Wassenaar AC, Maillie te Bronneger HH.No abstract available
Przewalski’s Horse (Equus ferus przewalskii) Re-introduction in the Great Gobi B Strictly Protected Area: from Species to Ecosystem Conservation.
Mongolian journal of biological sciences    December 1, 2007   Volume 5, Issue 1-2 13-18 doi: 10.22353/mjbs.2007.05.03
Kaczensky P, Ganbaatar O, von Wehrden H, Enksaikhan N, Lkhagvasuren D, Walzer C.The Przewalski's horse (Equus ferus przewalskii Poljakov, 1881), or "Takhi" in Mongolian, became extinct in the wild by the mid 1960's. The last recorded sightings of Przewalski's horses occurred in the Dzungarian Gobi desert in SW Mongolia, today's Great Gobi B Strictly Protected Area (SPA). A re-introduction program was initiated in 1992 and the first group of captive-born Przewalski's horses was airlifted to the SPA. Given the logistical challenges associated with such a venture, the initial project focus has been on transport logistics and the well-being of the re-introduced horses. Today,...