Analyze Diet

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.
Evolutionary genetics. Horses domesticated multiple times.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    March 3, 2001   Volume 291, Issue 5503 412 doi: 10.1126/science.291.5503.412
Pennisi E.No abstract available
Factors influencing the international spread of equine diseases.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    February 24, 2001   Volume 16, Issue 3 537-x doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30094-9
Timoney PJ.In an era of increasing globalization, the risk of spread of infectious diseases in humans and animals, including equids, has never been greater. International movement of equids and trade in semen are the most important factors responsible for the dissemination of various equine pathogens. Other factors that can or do have the potential to influence the global distribution of equine infectious diseases include: multinational trade agreements, emergent diseases, mutation of pathogens, climate related phenomena, migration of amplifying/reservoir hosts or vectors, availability of new vectors, va...
The increasing significance of international trade in equids and its influence on the spread of infectious diseases.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    February 24, 2001   Volume 916 55-60 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2000.tb05274.x
Timoney PJ.Expansion in international trade in equids and equine semen has been especially notable over the past 10-15 years among those countries historically identified as having significant breeding and performance horse industries. The continuing trend towards globalization of the horse industry received additional impetus in January, 1995, following establishment of the World Trade Organization (WTO), whose primary goal is to promote freer economic exchange between member countries through the reduction or elimination of protectionist barriers to trade. Continued growth in international trade, close...
Cytogenetics of donkey chromosomes: nomenclature proposal based on GTG-banded chromosomes and depiction of NORs and telomeric sites.
Chromosome research : an international journal on the molecular, supramolecular and evolutionary aspects of chromosome biology    February 24, 2001   Volume 8, Issue 8 659-670 doi: 10.1023/a:1026707002538
Raudsepp T, Christensen K, Chowdhar BP.With the expansion of comparative genome analysis across different mammals, there is an increasing need to have well-defined banded karyotypes for the species chosen for investigation. In this context, the steadily growing gene mapping data in the donkey urgently require a framework whereby alignment/comparison of genetic information can be readily made with equids and other mammalian species. Hence a GTG-banded karyotype of the donkey (Equus asinus; EAS) is presented, along with schematic drawings and nomenclature of the banded chromosomes. In addition, the most characteristic features of ind...
Widespread origins of domestic horse lineages.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    February 13, 2001   Volume 291, Issue 5503 474-477 doi: 10.1126/science.291.5503.474
Vilà C, Leonard JA, Gotherstrom A, Marklund S, Sandberg K, Liden K, Wayne RK, Ellegren H.Domestication entails control of wild species and is generally regarded as a complex process confined to a restricted area and culture. Previous DNA sequence analyses of several domestic species have suggested only a limited number of origination events. We analyzed mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region sequences of 191 domestic horses and found a high diversity of matrilines. Sequence analysis of equids from archaeological sites and late Pleistocene deposits showed that this diversity was not due to an accelerated mutation rate or an ancient domestication event. Consequently, high mtDNA se...
Welfare of equids ever-evolving.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 7, 2001   Volume 216, Issue 3 319-322 
Korioth TI.No abstract available
Valsequillo biostratigraphy. III: Equid ecospecies in Paleoindian sites.
Anthropologischer Anzeiger; Bericht uber die biologisch-anthropologische Literatur    November 18, 2000   Volume 58, Issue 3 275-298 
Pichardo M.Greater precision in North American Pleistocene equid taxonomy makes it now possible to exploit the ubiquitous horse remains in Paleoindian sites as ecological index-fossils. The horses of Central Mexico and the Southern Plains can be sorted by tooth size alone, except for two rare large horses of the Southern Plains. The species endemic to these grasslands and south to Central Mexico are Equus pacificus (large), E. conversidens (small), E. francisci (smallest). The Southern Plains were also occupied by a specialized grazer E. excelsus (Burnet and Sandia caves) and E. occidentalis (Dry and San...
A novel uterine lipocalin supporting pregnancy in equids.
Cellular and molecular life sciences : CMLS    November 15, 2000   Volume 57, Issue 10 1373-1378 doi: 10.1007/PL00000622
Stewart F, Kennedy MW, Suire S.Horses, donkeys, and therefore, probably all equids, secrete a nonglycosylated, progesterone-dependent, 19-kDa protein (P19) into the uterine lumen during early pregnancy, and significant quantities of it are taken up by the developing conceptus. Sequence analysis and structural modelling have identified P19 as a lipocalin with greatest similarity to the murine major urinary protein lipocalins. However, lack of strong identity with any particular group of lipocalins and several unusual structural features, including a unique amino acid triplet within one of the invariant domains and an unusual...
Prevalence of selected species of internal parasites in equids at necropsy in central Kentucky (1995-1999).
Veterinary parasitology    August 11, 2000   Volume 92, Issue 1 51-62 doi: 10.1016/s0304-4017(00)00266-1
Lyons ET, Swerczek TW, Tolliver SC, Bair HD, Drudge JH, Ennis LE.A survey to determine current prevalence of several species of endoparasites in equids (n=350) at necropsy was conducted at the Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center in central Kentucky (1995-1999). Thelazia lacrymalis were found in 42% of the 1- to 4-year olds (n=132), which was the only age group examined for these parasites. Five- to 30-year olds (n=157), examined for Onchocerca spp. worms/lesions, had a prevalence of 24%. In > or =1-year olds (n=324), the infection rate for Gasterophilus intestinalis was 12% for second instars and 14% for third instars and for Gasterophilus nasalis was 2%...
Characterisation of 25 new physically mapped horse microsatellite loci: AHT24++-48.
Animal genetics    July 15, 2000   Volume 31, Issue 3 237-238 
Swinburne JE, Lockhart L, Aldridge V, Marti E, Breen M, Binns MM.No abstract available
The equine CD74 gene has a polymorphic (CAG)n repeat in the 5′-untranslated region.
Animal genetics    July 15, 2000   Volume 31, Issue 3 239-240 
Tozaki T, Mashima S, Miura N, Tomita M.No abstract available
Induction of apoptosis by equine arteritis virus infection.
Virus genes    June 29, 2000   Volume 20, Issue 2 143-147 doi: 10.1023/a:1008122715387
Archambault D, St-Laurent G.Equine arteritis virus (EAV) is the etiological agent of equine viral arteritis, a contagious viral disease of equids. EAV is the prototype virus of the arteriviruses, a group of small enveloped viruses with positive single-stranded RNA genomes. Because apoptosis or programmed cell death is believed to play an important role in the biogenesis of several cytopathogenic viruses, we examined whether EAV was able to induce cell apoptosis in vitro. To do this, Vero cells were infected with EAV at a multiplicity of infection of 0.1 tissue culture infectious dose (TCID50) per cell, and analyzed at va...
Ten equine dinucleotide microsatellite repeats HTG18-19, HTG22-24, HTG26-27, HGT29-30 and HTG32.
Animal genetics    April 27, 2000   Volume 31, Issue 2 145-146 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2000.00585.x
Lindgren G.No abstract available
Twenty-one new equine dinucleotide repeat microsatellites.
Animal genetics    April 27, 2000   Volume 31, Issue 2 141 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2000.00574.x
Roberts MC, Murtaugh J, Valberg SJ, Mickelson JR, Alexander LJ.No abstract available
The isolation and characterization of 18 equine microsatellite loci, TKY272-TKY289.
Animal genetics    April 27, 2000   Volume 31, Issue 2 149-150 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2000.00596.x
Tozaki T, Kakoi H, Mashima S, Hirota K, Hasegawa T, Ishida N, Miura N, Tomita M.No abstract available
Adaptive explanation in socio-ecology: lessons from the Equidae.
Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society    March 31, 2000   Volume 75, Issue 1 1-20 doi: 10.1017/s0006323199005411
Linklater WL.Socio-ecological explanations for intra- and interspecific variation in the social and spatial organization of animals predominate in the scientific literature. The socio-ecological model, developed first for the Bovidae and Cervidae, is commonly applied more widely to other groups including the Equidae. Intraspecific comparisons are particularly valuable because they allow the role of environment and demography on social and spatial organization to be understood while controlling for phylogeny or morphology which confound interspecific comparisons. Feral horse (Equus caballus Linnaeus 1758) p...
Estrous cycle characteristics and response to estrus synchronization in mammoth asses (Equus asinus americanus).
Theriogenology    March 29, 2000   Volume 52, Issue 5 827-834 doi: 10.1016/S0093-691X(99)00175-2
Blanchard TL, Taylor TS, Love CL.Breeding records from a herd of mammoth asses (Equus asinus americanus) maintained on pasture in southeast Texas from 1990 to 1998 were reviewed. Jennies were pasture or hand mated, and estrus was either observed while the jennies were on pasture or when exposed to a jack after being penned. Eighty-one estrus periods and 43 diestrus intervals were recorded in 33 jennies over 4 seasons of the year (January-March, April-June, July-September, and October-December). Estrous cycle length and the duration of estrus were similar among seasons. Over all seasons, estrous cycle length was 23.3 +/- 2.6 d...
Gasterophilus nasalis infection: prevalence and pathological changes in equids in south-west England.
The Veterinary record    March 24, 2000   Volume 146, Issue 8 222-223 doi: 10.1136/vr.146.8.222
Coles GC, Pearson GR.No abstract available
Tissue sites of persistent infection and active replication of equine infectious anemia virus during acute disease and asymptomatic infection in experimentally infected equids.
Journal of virology    March 9, 2000   Volume 74, Issue 7 3112-3121 doi: 10.1128/jvi.74.7.3112-3121.2000
Harrold SM, Cook SJ, Cook RF, Rushlow KE, Issel CJ, Montelaro RC.Equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) infection of horses is characterized by recurring cycles of disease and viremia that typically progress to an inapparent infection in which clinical symptoms are absent as host immune responses maintain control of virus replication indefinitely. The dynamics of EIAV viremia and its association with disease cycles have been well characterized, but there has been to date no comprehensive quantitative analyses of the specific tissue sites of EIAV infection and replication in experimentally infected equids during acute disease episodes and during asymptomatic ...
ITS-1 ribosomal DNA sequence variants are maintained in different species and strains of Echinococcus.
International journal for parasitology    March 8, 2000   Volume 30, Issue 2 157-169 doi: 10.1016/s0020-7519(00)00002-3
van Herwerden L, Gasser RB, Blair D.This study investigated sequence heterogeneity in the first internal transcribed spacer (ITS-1) of ribosomal DNA within and among species and strains of Echinococcus. Different ITS-1 sequence variants exist in Echinococcus granulosus and Echinococcus multilocularis, which represent at least four evolutionary lineages: (1) a sheep strain-lineage of E. granulosus, (2) a sister lineage of a cervid and camel E. granulosus ITS-1 variants, (3) a lineage including the ITS-1 variants representing horse, bovine and camel strains of E. granulosus, as well as variants from E. multilocularis, Echinococcus...
Theriogenology question of the month. Specific aversion to handling for semen collection and to personal approaching the genital area.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 25, 2000   Volume 216, Issue 4 491-493 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.216.491
Bedford SJ, McDonnell SM.No abstract available
High-altitude effects on respiratory gases, acid-base balance and pulmonary artery pressures in equids.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 2000   Issue 30 71-76 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05192.x
Greene HM, Wickler SJ, Anderson TP, Cogger EA, Lewis CC, Wyle A.Arterial and venous blood were analysed at rest and post exercise for pH, PCO2, and PO2, and bicarbonate ([HCO3-]), base excess (BE), and strong ion difference (SID) were calculated in response to a 10 day sojourn to 3800 m. Pulmonary artery pressures (PAP) were measured at rest. Post exercise samples were restricted to venous blood. The equids (n = 6) experienced a profound hypoxia-hypocapnia and a respiratory alkalosis. PaO2 decreased 42% and PaCO2 41%. PaCO2 increased to 80% of initial values after 8 days at altitude. Arterial [HCO3-] decreased by 34%; however, it returned to normal by Day ...
[Functional morphology of the large intestinal mucosa of horses (Equus przewalskii f. caballus) with special regard to the epithelium].
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    February 1, 2000   Volume 28, Issue 5-6 355-365 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0264.1999.00223.x
Wille KH, Nakov C.The mucous membrane of the caecum and colon ascendens of adult horses was first studied using light and transmission electron microscopy. In the surface epithelium there was an inconspicuous constellation of organelles, otherwise there was a lot of mitochondria as a source of energy for absorptive performances. Moreover, enlarged intercellular spaces exist as an indication of an increased uptake of water and electrolytes. In the basal region of Lieberkühn's crypts there were single enteroendocrine cells and numerous granules in the apical epithelial cytoplasm. The functional meaning of these ...
Equid herpesvirus-induced immunosuppression is associated with lymphoid cells and not soluble circulating factors.
Viral immunology    January 12, 2000   Volume 12, Issue 4 313-321 doi: 10.1089/vim.1999.12.313
Hannant D, O'Neill T, Ostlund EN, Kydd JH, Hopkin PJ, Mumford JA.A paresis isolate of equid herpesvirus 1 (EHV1, Ab4/8) and a plaque-purified virus derived from it (EHV1, Ab4/13), induced long-term suppression of both mitogenic and antigen-specific lymphocyte proliferations in adult outbred ponies. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) taken from a pony after EHV1 infection suppressed the in vitro function of normal cells but serum did not. This showed that the observed immune suppression was associated with circulating PBMC and/or their products rather than circulating soluble factors such as antigen or immune complexes. The results suggested that prod...
Horse alpha-1-antitrypsin, beta-lactoglobulins 1 and 2, and transferrin map to positions 24q15-q16, 28q18-qter, 28q18-qter and 16q23, respectively. Lear TL, Brandon R, Masel A, Bell K, Bailey E.No abstract available
[Quantitative characteristics of the differential banding pattern prometaphase chromosomes of the domestic horse (Equus caballus)].
Genetika    January 7, 2000   Volume 35, Issue 10 1410-1421 
Deriusheva SE, Loginova IuA, Chiriaeva OG, Iaschak K.A high-resolution cytogenetic map (670 bands per haploid set) of RBA-banded chromosomes has been constructed in the domestic horse Equus caballus. The size and distribution of the replication-based R(G)-bands were analyzed using the computer program VideoTest-Karyo. The obtained data were compared to the results of cytogenetic mapping in other mammalian species and human.
Equine dinucleotide repeat loci COR061-COR080.
Animal genetics    December 28, 1999   Volume 30, Issue 6 462-463 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.1999.00498-9.x
Tallmadge RL, Hopman TJ, Schug MD, Aquadro CF, Bowling AT, Murray JD, Caetano AR, Antczak DF.No abstract available
Anatomy rises from the ashes.
Equine veterinary journal    December 22, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 6 453-454 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03850.x
Wilson AM.No abstract available
Encephalopathy with idiopathic hyperammonaemia and Alzheimer type II astrocytes in equidae.
Equine veterinary journal    December 22, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 6 478-482 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03854.x
Hasel KM, Summers BA, De Lahunta A.In 3 mature female horses of varying breeds, episodes of colic and depression for 14 days preceded an encephalopathic disorder with maniacal behaviour, anxiety, profuse sweating and, in one case, terminal opisthotonus. Blood ammonia levels were elevated approximately 10-fold. At necropsy, there were gastrointestinal serosal and mesenteric haemorrhages. Histologically, all 3 cases revealed diffuse Alzheimer type II astrocytes in the cerebral grey matter. Alzheimer type II astrocytes were glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) negative or only weakly positive, weakly S-100 positive, and vimentin...
CT examination of the guttural pouch (auditory tube diverticulum) in Przewalski’s Horse (Equus przewalskii).
The Journal of veterinary medical science    October 27, 1999   Volume 61, Issue 9 1019-1022 doi: 10.1292/jvms.61.1019
Sasaki M, Hayashi Y, Koie H, Yamaya Y, Kimura J, Manglai D, Kawashima S, Endo H, Yamamoto M.The domestic horse (Equus caballus) have the large symmetrical guttural pouches (the auditory tube diverticulum) formed by saccate bulge of the auditory tube. In this study, CT examination was carried out in the head of Przewalski's horse (Equus przewalskii), the only true wild horse living at present. As results of the examination, Przewalski's horse possessed the large symmetrical guttural pouches divided into medial and lateral compartments by the stylohyoid bone. Moreover, the right and left guttural pouches meet each other at the median part to form a thin septum. As CT sections get close...
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