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Topic:Equids

Equids are members of the family Equidae, which includes modern horses, donkeys, and zebras, as well as extinct species. Equids are characterized by their long limbs, single-toed hooves, and herbivorous diet, which is primarily composed of grasses. Horses, specifically, have been domesticated for thousands of years and have played significant roles in agriculture, transportation, and sport. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore various aspects of equids and horses, including their evolution, physiology, behavior, and interactions with humans. The collected works provide insights into the genetic diversity, adaptive traits, and conservation efforts related to equid species.
[Information in communal animal housing].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    March 19, 2005   Volume 130, Issue 5 142 
Boissevain I.No abstract available
Equine dentistry–“the state of the art and the state of the science”.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    February 25, 2005   Volume 169, Issue 2 159-161 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2004.10.016
Knottenbelt DC.No abstract available
A comparison of the intestinal helminth communities of Equidae in Southern Africa.
The Journal of parasitology    February 18, 2005   Volume 90, Issue 6 1263-1273 doi: 10.1645/GE-3353
Matthee S, Krecek RC, McGeoch MA.The intestinal helminth communities of 8 horses, 12 donkeys, 21 Hartmann's mountain zebras, and 44 Burchell's zebras were compared using the original data from 6 studies in South Africa and Namibia. Necropsy and worm recovery techniques were comparable between the studies. Sixty helminth species (58 nematode, 1 cestode, and 1 trematode species) were recorded. There were significant differences in the helminth community structures of the 4 Equus species. The helminth communities of the 2 closely related zebra subspecies were most similar, and they jointly shared 7 helminth species with donkeys ...
Genetic characterization of Indian Spiti horses.
Journal of genetics    February 4, 2005   Volume 83, Issue 3 291-295 doi: 10.1007/BF02717899
Chauhan M, Gupta AK, Dhillon S.No abstract available
Society of Vertebrate Paleontology meeting. Timing complicates history of horses.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    November 30, 2004   Volume 306, Issue 5701 1467 doi: 10.1126/science.306.5701.1467a
Stokstad E.No abstract available
Effects of season and sample handling on measurement of plasma alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone concentrations in horses and ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    November 30, 2004   Volume 65, Issue 11 1463-1468 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2004.65.1463
McFarlane D, Donaldson MT, McDonnell SM, Cribb AE.To investigate effects of sample handling, storage, and collection time and season on plasma alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) concentration in healthy equids. Methods: 11 healthy Standardbreds and 13 healthy semiferal ponies. Methods: Plasma alpha-MSH concentration was measured by use of radioimmunoassay. Effects of delayed processing were accessed by comparing alpha-MSH concentrations in plasma immediately separated with that of plasma obtained from blood samples that were stored at 4 degrees C for 8 or 48 hours before plasma was separated. Effects of suboptimal handling were ...
Antigenic evaluation of a recombinant baculovirus-expressed Sarcocystis neurona SAG1 antigen.
The Journal of parasitology    November 26, 2004   Volume 90, Issue 5 1027-1033 doi: 10.1645/0022-3395(2004)090[1027:AEOARB]2.0.CO;2
Gupta GD, Lakritz J, Saville WJ, Livingston RS, Dubey JP, Middleton JR, Marsh AE.Sarcocystis neurona is the primary parasite associated with equine protozoal myeloencephalitis (EPM). This is a commonly diagnosed neurological disorder in the Americas that infects the central nervous system of horses. Current serologic assays utilize culture-derived parasites as antigen. This method requires large numbers of parasites to be grown in culture, which is labor intensive and time consuming. Also, a culture-derived whole-parasite preparation contains conserved antigens that could cross-react with antibodies against other Sarcocystis species and members of Sarcocystidae such as Neo...
Galloway cattle and horse evaluated as dispersers of plant seeds in nature management.
Communications in agricultural and applied biological sciences    November 25, 2004   Volume 69, Issue 2 69-72 
Couvreur M, Hermy M.No abstract available
[Hippo shoe and the Celtic horse shoe].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    October 29, 2004   Volume 129, Issue 19 632 
No abstract available
A redescription of Cylicocyclus adersi Boulenger, 1920 (Nematoda: Strongyloidea: Cyathostominae) parasitic in equids.
Systematic parasitology    October 13, 2004   Volume 59, Issue 2 127-134 doi: 10.1023/B:SYPA.0000044429.04246.3b
Kharchenko VA, Lichtenfels JR, Pilitt PA, Krecek RC.As part of a revision of the systematics of the Cyathostominea of equids, we determined that the single type-specimen of Cylicocyclus adersi Boulenger, 1920 is missing and a modern description of this rare species parasitic in donkeys Equus asinus L. and zebras E. burchelli (Gray) and E. zebra L. is not available. Systematists at a workshop on the systematics of the Cyathostominea of horses, convened on August 11, 1997 in Sun City, South Africa, listed C. adersi as a species inquirenda . Herein, we provide a redescription of C. adersi and propose a neotype for the species. The distinctive shap...
2000 Year-old ancient equids: an ancient-DNA lesson from pompeii remains.
Journal of experimental zoology. Part B, Molecular and developmental evolution    October 7, 2004   Volume 302, Issue 6 550-556 doi: 10.1002/jez.b.21017
Di Bernardo G, Del Gaudio S, Galderisi U, Cipollaro M.Ancient DNA extracted from 2000 year-old equine bones was examined in order to amplify mitochondrial and nuclear DNA fragments. A specific equine satellite-type sequence representing 3.7%-11% of the entire equine genome, proved to be a suitable target to address the question of the presence of aDNA in ancient bones. The PCR strategy designed to investigate this specific target also allowed us to calculate the molecular weight of amplifiable DNA fragments. Sequencing of a 370 bp DNA fragment of mitochondrial control region allowed the comparison of ancient DNA sequences with those of modern hor...
[The domestic animal in heraldry; Part 3, the horse].
Historia medicinae veterinariae    September 24, 2004   Volume 28, Issue 3 84-88 
Mache C.The author presents in her paper the historical background of the heraldic. In the coming four papers she will discuss the use and position of different domestic animals in heraldic.
Outcome of equids with clinical signs of West Nile virus infection and factors associated with death.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 25, 2004   Volume 225, Issue 2 267-274 doi: 10.2460/javma.2004.225.267
Salazar P, Traub-Dargatz JL, Morley PS, Wilmot DD, Steffen DJ, Cunningham WE, Salman MD.To determine outcome of equids in the western United States with clinical signs of West Nile virus (WNV) infection and identify factors associated with risk of death in infected equids. Methods: Cross-sectional study. Methods: 484 equids in Nebraska and Colorado. Methods: Owners of 484 equids with laboratory-confirmed West Nile virus infection in Nebraska and Colorado were contacted by telephone, and a questionnaire was used to obtain information on signalment, management, clinical signs, date of disease onset, duration of disease, WNV vaccination status, and health status at the time of the i...
Why clone horses and mules?
IEEE engineering in medicine and biology magazine : the quarterly magazine of the Engineering in Medicine & Biology Society    July 22, 2004   Volume 23, Issue 2 32-36 doi: 10.1109/memb.2004.1310971
White KL, Woods GL, Vanderwall DK, Li GP, Sessions BR, Bunch TD.No abstract available
Polymorphisms of the equine major histocompatibility complex class II DRA locus.
Tissue antigens    July 13, 2004   Volume 64, Issue 2 173-179 doi: 10.1111/j.1399-0039.2004.00269.x
Brown JJ, Thomson W, Clegg P, Eyre S, Kennedy LJ, Matthews J, Carter S, Ollier WE.The full extent of the polymorphism of ELA-DRA in Equidae is not yet known. Given the apparent differences in DRA polymorphisms between Equidae and other species, the aims of this study were to more fully characterize ELA-DRA, determine the extent of gene polymorphism and establish the allele-frequency distribution. An allele reference panel for the second exon of ELA-DRA was established by sequence-based typing of 69 equine DNA samples consisting of various breeds of domestic horse (Equus caballus), together with donkeys (Equus asinus), Grant's zebras (Equus boehmi) and one onager (Equus hemi...
Review of horses in Paleoindian sites of the Americas. Pichardo M.Analysis of the morphological characters in North and South American horses present during Paleoindian time indicates that at least eight Equus ecospecies occurred in North America. In South America, Equus had radiated into four ecospecies, Hippidion had one, and Onohippidium had three geographically separate ecospecies. These species are found in archeological deposits ranging from ca. 13,000 to 8,000 yr B.P., in tropical habitats as well as in the high Andean and Patagonian colder ecotopes.
Isolation of Y chromosome-specific microsatellites in the horse and cross-species amplification in the genus Equus.
The Journal of heredity    April 10, 2004   Volume 95, Issue 2 158-164 doi: 10.1093/jhered/esh020
Wallner B, Piumi F, Brem G, Müller M, Achmann R.Y chromosome polymorphisms such as microsatellites or single nucleotide polymorphisms represent a paternal counterpart to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) for evolutionary and phylogeographic studies. The use of Y chromosome haplotyping in natural populations of species other than humans is still hindered by the lack of sequence information necessary for polymorphism screening. Here we used representational difference analysis (RDA) followed by a screen of a bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) library for repetitive sequences to obtain polymorphic Y-chromosomal markers. The procedure was performed ...
[Genealogic analysis of hereditary components of a metapopulation of Przhevalsky horse].
Genetika    April 7, 2004   Volume 40, Issue 2 261-266 
Belousova IP, Orlov VN, Kudriavtsev IV.The current condition of the megapopulation of the Przhevalsky horse was assessed using genetic indices of biological diversity of species and genealogical analysis and taking into account both nuclear and non-nuclear (mitochondrial), maternally inherited components of hereditary information.
Genetic characterization of Pompeii and Herculaneum Equidae buried by Vesuvius in 79 AD.
Journal of cellular physiology    March 25, 2004   Volume 199, Issue 2 200-205 doi: 10.1002/jcp.10461
Di Bernardo G, Galderisi U, Del Gaudio S, D'Aniello A, Lanave C, De Robertis MT, Cascino A, Cipollaro M.DNA extracted from the skeletons of five equids discovered in a Pompeii stable and of a horse found in Herculaneum was investigated. Amino acid racemization level was consistent with the presence of DNA. Post-mortem base modifications were excluded by sequencing a 146 bp fragment of the 16S rRNA mitochondrial gene. Sequencing of a 370 bp fragment of mitochondrial (mt)DNA control region allowed the construction of a phylogenetic tree that, along with sequencing of nuclear genes (epsilon globin, gamma interferon, and p53) fragments, gave us the possibility to address some questions puzzling arch...
Advances in developing molecular-diagnostic tools for strongyloid nematodes of equids: fundamental and applied implications.
Molecular and cellular probes    March 24, 2004   Volume 18, Issue 1 3-16 doi: 10.1016/j.mcp.2003.10.001
Gasser RB, Hung GC, Chilton NB, Beveridge I.Infections of equids with parasitic nematodes of the order Strongylida (subfamilies Strongylinae and Cyathostominae) are of major veterinary importance. In last decades, the widespread use of drugs against these parasites has led to problems of resistance within the Cyathostominae, and to an increase in their prevalence and intensity of infection. Novel control strategies, based on improved knowledge of parasite biology and epidemiology, have thus become important. However, there are substantial limitations in the understanding of fundamental biological and systematic aspects of these parasite...
[Chronology of horseshoes found in Switzerland].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    March 18, 2004   Volume 146, Issue 1 17-25 doi: 10.1024/0036-7281.146.1.17
Imhof U.The horse was domesticated by a people in Central Asia. However, it is not known where and who invented horse shoeing, an invention that increased the possibilities for using horses. The word "horseshoe" was first mentioned in a document from 826 p.c. Up to now an archaeologist couldn't date an excavated horseshoe. I succeeded now to establish a chronology for horseshoes found in Switzerland. The first realisation is that in the course of more than thousand years of horse shoeing history three basic forms followed each other. Moreover, the existing horseshoes can be allocated to periodical typ...
[The beginning of horse breeding in Switzerland: 1850-1910].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    March 18, 2004   Volume 146, Issue 1 27-32 doi: 10.1024/0036-7281.146.1.27
Rizzoli A.No abstract available
Radiation hybrid mapping of 63 previously unreported equine microsatellite loci.
Animal genetics    March 18, 2004   Volume 35, Issue 2 159-162 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.2004.01109.x
Wagner ML, Goh G, Wu JT, Raudsepp T, Morrison LY, Alexander LJ, Skow LC, Chowdhary BP, Mickelson JR.No abstract available
Homologous fission event(s) implicated for chromosomal polymorphisms among five species in the genus Equus.
Cytogenetic and genome research    February 19, 2004   Volume 102, Issue 1-4 217-221 doi: 10.1159/000075752
Myka JL, Lear TL, Houck ML, Ryder OA, Bailey E.The genus Equus is unusual in that five of the ten extant species have documented centric fission (Robertsonian translocation) polymorphisms within their populations, namely E. hemionus onager, E. hemionus kulan, E. kiang, E. africanus somaliensis, and E. quagga burchelli. Here we report evidence that the polymorphism involves the same homologous chromosome segments in each species, and that these chromosome segments have homology to human chromosome 4 (HSA4). Bacterial artificial chromosome clones containing equine genes SMARCA5 (ECA2q21 homologue to HSA4q31. 21) and UCHL1 (ECA3q22 homologue ...
FISH analysis comparing genome organization in the domestic horse (Equus caballus) to that of the Mongolian wild horse (E. przewalskii).
Cytogenetic and genome research    February 19, 2004   Volume 102, Issue 1-4 222-225 doi: 10.1159/000075753
Myka JL, Lear TL, Houck ML, Ryder OA, Bailey E.Przewalski's wild horse (E. przewalskii, EPR) has a diploid chromosome number of 2n = 66 while the domestic horse (E. caballus, ECA) has a diploid chromosome number of 2n = 64. Discussions about their phylogenetic relationship and taxonomic classification have hinged on comparisons of their skeletal morphology, protein and mitochondrial DNA similarities, their ability to produce fertile hybrid offspring, and on comparison of their chromosome morphology and banding patterns. Previous studies of GTG-banded karyotypes suggested that the chromosomes of both equids were homologous and the differenc...
Noncoding sequences conserved in a limited number of mammals in the SIM2 interval are frequently functional.
Genome research    February 12, 2004   Volume 14, Issue 3 367-372 doi: 10.1101/gr.1961204
Frazer KA, Tao H, Osoegawa K, de Jong PJ, Chen X, Doherty MF, Cox DR.Cross-species DNA sequence comparison is a fundamental method for identifying biologically important elements, because functional sequences are evolutionarily conserved, wheres nonfunctional sequences drift. A recent genome-wide comparison of human and mouse DNA discovered over 200,000 conserved noncoding sequences with unknown function. Multispecies DNA comparison has been proposed as a method to prioritize these conserved noncoding sequences for functional analysis based on the hypothesis that elements present in many species are more likely to be functional than elements present in limited ...
Fixed nucleotide differences on the Y chromosome indicate clear divergence between Equus przewalskii and Equus caballus.
Animal genetics    December 23, 2003   Volume 34, Issue 6 453-456 doi: 10.1046/j.0268-9146.2003.01044.x
Wallner B, Brem G, Müller M, Achmann R.The phylogenetic relationship between Equus przewalskii and E. caballus is often a matter of debate. Although these taxa have different chromosome numbers, they do not form monophyletic clades in a phylogenetic tree based on mtDNA sequences. Here we report sequence variation from five newly identified Y chromosome regions of the horse. Two fixed nucleotide differences on the Y chromosome clearly display Przewalski's horse and domestic horse as sister taxa. At both positions the Przewalski's horse haplotype shows the ancestral state, in common with the members of the zebra/ass lineage. We discu...
Seroprevalence of antibodies to Sarcocystis neurona in equids residing in Oklahoma. Bentz BG, Ealey KA, Morrow J, Claypool PL, Saliki JT.A sampling of equids from the state of Oklahoma produced an estimate of seroprevalence of antibody to Sarcocystis neurona to be about 89.2%. This figure represents the highest currently reported regional seroprevalence of antibody to this organism. Regional differences in seroprevalence were found in the western quadrants of the state relative to the eastern quadrants of the state, with a significantly higher seroprevalence in the eastern regions. Thoroughbreds were found to exhibit a statistically significant lower seroprevalence as a breed group when compared with other breeds sampled.
The amino acid sequence of protein AA from a burro (Equus asinus). Sletten K, Johnson KH, Westermark P.The primary structure of amyloid fibril protein AA of a burro has been determined by Edman degradation. The 80 amino acid residue long protein shows strong resemblance to that of other mammalian AA-proteins and differs from equine protein AA at 5 positions: Burro/horse positions 20 (Q/N), 44 (R,Q, K/K,Q), 59 (G,L/G,A), 61 (Q/E) and 65 (N/R).
Equine passports.
The Veterinary record    November 19, 2003   Volume 153, Issue 17 538 
Frank C.No abstract available
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