Analyze Diet

Topic:Forage

Forage is a primary component of the equine diet, consisting mainly of grasses, hay, and legumes that provide essential nutrients and fiber. It plays a significant role in maintaining digestive health and supporting the overall well-being of horses. The nutritional composition of forage can vary based on factors such as plant species, maturity at harvest, and environmental conditions. Proper management and selection of forage are important for meeting the dietary needs of horses and preventing issues such as colic or laminitis. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the nutritional value, management practices, and impact of forage on equine health and performance.
Evaluation of a forage allocation model for Theodore Roosevelt National Park.
Journal of environmental management    May 9, 2002   Volume 64, Issue 2 153-169 doi: 10.1006/jema.2001.0514
Irby LR, Norland JE, Westfall JA, Sullivan MA.We developed a forage allocation model using a deterministic, linear optimization module in a commercially available spreadsheet package to help resource managers in Theodore Roosevelt National Park (TRNP), North Dakota determine optimum numbers of four ungulate species, bison (Bison bison), elk (Cervus elaphus), mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus), and feral horses, in the Park. TRNP staff actively managed bison, elk, and feral horse numbers within bounds suggested by our model from 1983 to 1996. During this period, we measured vegetation at 8 grassland and 12 wooded sites at 1-3 year intervals t...
Common vetch (Vicia sativa) for improving the nutrition of working equids in Campesino systems on hill slopes in Central Mexico.
Tropical animal health and production    April 24, 2002   Volume 34, Issue 2 169-179 doi: 10.1023/a:1014274308054
Velázquez-Beltrán LG, Felipe-Pérez YE, Arriaga-Jordán CM.Campesino systems on hill slopes in Central Mexico rely on equids for multiple activities and have a problem in adequately feeding them. A participatory trial was conducted to evaluate the inclusion of common vetch in the traditional forage oat crop to improve its feeding value. An agronomic evaluation was undertaken by intersowing common vetch at 40 kg seed/ha with oats at 80-100 kg/ha in small plots, recording the yield and the chemical composition of the fresh forage in ten plots at harvest. The data were analysed as a completely random design, taking each farmer/plot as a treatment. A feed...
Mycotoxins.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    January 10, 2002   Volume 17, Issue 3 547-viii doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30051-2
Osweiler GD.Horses consume feed grains and forages that can produce a range of mycotoxins resulting from mold invasion. Toxicosis of horses often occurs from fumonisins or aflatoxin in grains, from the tremorgenic mycotoxins in dallis grass, or from slaframine in red clover. Fumonisin toxicosis often is severe and fatal, and aflatoxin can be acute or chronic and debilitating. Other mycotoxins reported in horses may cause moderate to mild signs that regress when the contaminated feedstuff is removed. Overall, horses appear to have a relatively low prevalence of reported mycotoxicoses among domestic animals...
Metal toxicosis in horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    January 10, 2002   Volume 17, Issue 3 517-527 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30049-4
Casteel SW.The ubiquity and stability of metals in the environment make them unique as a pollutant or an essential dietary component. Metals are neither created nor destroyed by chemical processes but are redistributed in the environment. In combination with other elements, metal compounds and alloys are essential materials of the contemporary world. Inappropriate use or distribution in the environment leads to adverse health effects on all biologic systems, including horses. Gastrointestinal upset is a common feature of acute toxicosis with metals in general. Among the metals discussed, arsenic and inor...
Effect of partial replacement of oats with sugar beet pulp and maize oil on nutrient utilisation in horses.
Equine veterinary journal    November 27, 2001   Volume 33, Issue 6 585-590 doi: 10.2746/042516401776563535
Lindberg JE, Karlsson CP.The objective of the present work was to assess the influence of partial replacement of oats with dried unmolassed sugar beet pulp (SBP) and/or maize oil on nutrient utilisation in horses fed a traditional hay and concentrate diet. The total tract digestibility of nutrients, urinary excretion and plasma parameters were studied in a 4 x 4 Latin-square design experiment with purebred Arabian geldings. Horses fed the SBP diets responded with a reduced (P<0.05) apparent digestibility of crude protein and feeding of maize oil resulted in an increased (P<0.05) apparent digestibility of crude f...
Apparent digestibility of crude fibre in ponies fed either a low or high-protein diet.
Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition    November 1, 2001   Volume 85, Issue 7-8 251-254 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0396.2001.00323.x
Rey F, Hallebeek JM, Beynen AC.The question addressed was whether apparent crude fibre digestibility in ponies would change after lowering protein intake from adequate to borderline deficient. Four adult ponies were fed a low- and high-protein diet according to a cross-over design. The diets consisted of grass hay and concentrates and provided either 1.5 or 3.6 g digestible crude protein/kg(0.75) per day. The two whole rations provided 2.4 g crude fibre/kg body weight per day. Apparent crude fibre digestibility was not affected by protein intake (low-protein diet: 42.9 +/- 4.03%; high-protein diet: 38.1 +/- 1.14%, means +/-...
Detection of endophyte toxins in the imported perennial ryegrass straw.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    October 20, 2001   Volume 63, Issue 9 1013-1015 doi: 10.1292/jvms.63.1013
Miyazaki S, Fukumura M, Yoshioka M, Yamanaka N.From 1997 to 1999, 29 cases of disorders were detected in cattle and horses that had been fed ryegrass straw imported from the U.S.A. These animals showed symptoms resembling ryegrass staggers and the clinical signs disappeared after removal of the straw. Endophytic hyphae were detected in the seeds of all straw samples that were responsible for the clinical cases. Lolitrem B concentrations in the straw ranged between 972 and 3740 ppb. Ergovaline concentrations were between 355 and 1300 ppb. Even though the concentrations of lolitrem B were lower than the toxic threshold proposed by Oregon Sta...
Alkanes as internal markers to estimate digestibility of hay or hay plus concentrate diets in horses.
Journal of animal science    June 27, 2001   Volume 79, Issue 6 1516-1522 doi: 10.2527/2001.7961516x
Ordakowski AL, Kronfeld DS, Holland JL, Hargreaves BJ, Gay LS, Harris PA, Dove H, Sklan D.Dry matter intake (DMI), dry matter digestibility (DMD), and fecal output (FO) are difficult to measure directly in the field, and indirect methods using external and internal markers have thus been developed. An experiment was conducted consisting of two digestion trials with two periods in each trial to examine the use of five odd-chain alkanes (C25 to C33) of plant cuticular wax as internal markers to estimate DMD of hay or hay plus concentrate diets in horses. Eight mature Thoroughbred geldings were housed in 4- x 4-m stalls and randomly assigned to one of two mixed grass/legume hays (Diet...
The effect of forage quality and level of feeding on digestibility and gastrointestinal transit time of oat straw and alfalfa given to ponies and donkeys.
The British journal of nutrition    May 12, 2001   Volume 85, Issue 5 599-606 doi: 10.1079/bjn2001321
Pearson RA, Archibald RF, Muirhead RH.Four donkeys and four ponies were fed molassed dehydrated alfalfa or oat straw, either ad libitum or restricted to about 70% ad libitum intake in a Latin-square design for four periods of 21 d. Measurements of apparent digestibility and gastrointestinal transit time were made on the last 7 d of each period. When the forages were provided ad libitum, all animals ate significantly more of the alfalfa than of the oat straw. Ponies consumed significantly more of both diets per unit live weight than donkeys. Higher apparent digestibilities of dietary DM, energy and fibre fractions were seen in donk...
Understanding equine stereotypies.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    April 21, 2001   Issue 28 20-25 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05151.x
Nicol C.It is frequently asserted that equine stereotypies, such as crib-biting, wind-sucking and weaving, are caused by boredom. However, this explanation is too general to be of practical use in discerning the causes of each stereotypy or in devising management practices to prevent their occurrence. The majority of equine stereotypes start within one month of weaning when both the nutritional and social environment of the foal are substantially altered. Epidemiological research has revealed that the provision of low quantities of forage and minimal opportunities for social contact are associated wit...
Dietary fat supplementation effects on in vitro nutrient disappearance and in vivo nutrient intake and total tract digestibility by horses.
Journal of animal science    February 24, 2001   Volume 79, Issue 1 232-239 doi: 10.2527/2001.791232x
Bush JA, Freeman DE, Kline KH, Merchen NR, Fahey GC.Addition of fat to the diet of the equine is a popular method of increasing energy density of the diet while reducing feed intake. Reducing feed intake is of interest to race horse trainers because additional feed is seen as additional weight and, therefore, a hindrance to performance. Limited information is available regarding the interactions of fat with other dietary components, particularly fiber, in the equine digestive system. The effect of dietary fat on in vitro nutrient disappearance in equine cecal fluid was studied in Exp. 1 using a split-plot design within a 2 x 2 Latin square. Two...
Hydrolyzable carbohydrates in pasture, hay, and horse feeds: direct assay and seasonal variation.
Journal of animal science    February 24, 2001   Volume 79, Issue 2 500-506 doi: 10.2527/2001.792500x
Hoffman RM, Wilson JA, Kronfeld DS, Cooper WL, Lawrence LA, Sklan D, Harris PA.Carbohydrates may be hydrolyzed or fermented in the digestive tract, and this distinction is important for the evaluation of the diet of herbivores. Both hydrolyzable and fermentable carbohydrates are included in the nonstructural carbohydrate (NSC) fraction as estimated by difference using proximate analysis. Our objectives were to measure hydrolyzable carbohydrates in forages and concentrates, to compare these values with nonstructural carbohydrate, to test for prediction of hydrolyzable carbohydrate concentration in forages from its near-infrared spectrum, and to examine seasonal variation ...
[Comparative study of three feeding methods for draught horses of the Swiss army].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    November 10, 2000   Volume 142, Issue 10 570-579 
Riond JL, Leoni S, Wanner M.Three feeding methods were compared in 36 4- to 6-year-old Franche-Montagne horses during the military school of St-Luzisteig (GR) of Spring 1992. The horses were separated into 3 groups: a group with the traditional oats-hay ration (OH), a group with a pelleted feed and hay ration (PFH), and a group with the complete diet (CD). Feed analyses were performed and food consumption, eating behavior and digestibility were studied. The horses received their daily amount of feed in 3 portions covering the requirements for a medium work: OH = 8 kg hay and 3 kg oats, PFH = 8 kg hay and 3 kg pelleted fe...
Properties of herbage in relation to equine dysautonomia: biochemical composition and antioxidant and prooxidant actions.
Journal of agricultural and food chemistry    July 11, 2000   Volume 48, Issue 6 2346-2352 doi: 10.1021/jf991101n
McGorum BC, Fry SC, Wallace G, Coenen K, Robb J, Williamson G, Aruoma OI.To investigate the etiology of equine dysautonomia (ED), a degenerative polyneuropathy affecting grazing horses, the biochemical composition and antioxidant/prooxidant activities of aqueous extracts of plants collected from ED pastures were determined. Plants collected immediately after an outbreak of ED had reduced antioxidant and weak prooxidant activities when compared with control plants (plants collected from ED pastures out of ED season and control plants from ED pastures that were grown under favorable conditions). ED plants also had significantly increased concentrations of fructose an...
Digestible energy expenditure in grazing activity of growing horses.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 2000   Issue 30 490-492 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05271.x
Asai Y, Matsui A, Osawa T, Kawai M, Kondo S.Ten Thoroughbred yearlings (5 females and 5 males) were used to examine the effect of time of grazing on pasture forage and digestible energy (DE) intake, bodyweight gain and DE expenditure in grazing activity. Five females were grazed for 17 h/day (LTG), 5 males were grazed for 7 h/day (STG) and they were fed differently. As a result, DE intake from pasture forage of LTG horses and STG horses was 27.3 and 12.7-13.9 Mcal/day, respectively. The average daily gain (ADG) of LTG and STG horses was 0.37 and 0.39-0.61 kg/day, respectively. The regression lines between DE intake and ADG of both group...
The effects of timing and amount of forage and grain on exercise response in thoroughbred horses.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 2000   Issue 30 451-457 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05264.x
Pagan JD, Harris PA.There is considerable debate among horsemen about how to feed horses before exercise. Should horses be fed or fasted before work and when should hay be fed relative to grain and/or exercise? Three experiments were conducted to evaluate if feeding hay with and without grain affects glycaemic and haematological responses in Thoroughbred (TB) horses at rest and during a simulated competition exercise test (CET) on a high-speed treadmill. In Experiment 1, 6 TB horses were fed hay at 3 different times relative to a grain meal. Time of feeding hay affected glycaemic response, plasma protein and wate...
Equine dysautonomia: has grass been blamed unfairly all this time?
Equine veterinary journal    December 22, 1999   Volume 31, Issue 6 451-452 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb03849.x
Wood JL, McGorum BC, Mayhew IG.No abstract available
Voluntary intake, digestibility, and subsequent selection of Matua bromegrass, coastal bermudagrass, and alfalfa hays by yearling horses.
Journal of animal science    October 16, 1999   Volume 77, Issue 10 2766-2773 doi: 10.2527/1999.77102766x
LaCasha PA, Brady HA, Allen VG, Richardson CR, Pond KR.Matua bromegrass (Bromus willdenowii Kunth. cv. Grasslands Matua) was introduced in 1973, but little information exists concerning its potential as a hay for horses. Thus, voluntary intake and apparent digestibility of OM, CP, and fiber components of Matua by 18 Quarter Horse yearlings (mean initial BW 354 kg; SE 5.8) were compared with alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) and coastal bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon L.) as hays in a randomized block design. A 15-d adjustment period was followed by a 5-d collection period during which the hays were consumed ad libitum. Voluntary intake of DM was greater...
Exercise affects digestibility and rate of passage of all-forage and mixed diets in thoroughbred horses.
The Journal of nutrition    December 30, 1998   Volume 128, Issue 12 Suppl 2704S-2707S doi: 10.1093/jn/128.12.2704S
Pagan JD, Harris P, Brewster-Barnes T, Duren SE, Jackson SG.Most digestibility studies in horses have been conducted with idle horses confined to metabolism stalls. The values obtained from such studies are used for all classes of horses, including the performance horse. It has not been clearly established whether exercise affects digestibility. Olsson and Ruudvere (1955), summarizing a number of earlier studies, suggested that digestion may be affected in horses by work or exercise in such a way that it is improved by light exercise and inhibited by heavy work. Orton et al. (1985) reported reduced retention time of a particulate marker in yearling ...
Calculation of fecal kinetics in horses fed hay or hay and concentrate.
Journal of animal science    August 5, 1998   Volume 76, Issue 7 1937-1944 doi: 10.2527/1998.7671937x
Holland JL, Kronfeld DS, Sklan D, Harris PA.Marker methods are needed for estimating fecal output by grazing animals in studies of nutrition and environmental impact. In addition, estimates of prefecal mass and turnover time are relevant to exercise performance and certain digestive disorders. As a first step in developing marker methods for field use, a chromic oxide model of fecal kinetics was developed and tested in the context of a digestion balance experiment with stall-fed horses. The model consists of removal of feces at a constant rate from a single compartment, the prefecal mass. Four horses were fed hay, and another four were ...
The energetic feed evaluation in Germany.
Archiv fur Tierernahrung    July 22, 1998   Volume 51, Issue 2-3 111-125 doi: 10.1080/17450399809381912
Flachowsky G, Kirchgessner M.The paper describes the energetic feed evaluation systems for ruminants, pigs, poultry and horses presently used in Germany. During the last ten years the "Ausschuss für Bedarfsnormen" (AfB; Committee of Nutrient Requirements) of the "Gesellschaft für Ernährungsphysiologie" (GfE, Society of Nutritional Physiology) introduced new recommendations for energy requirements of domestic animals including national and international references. The energetic requirements were factorially deduced (demand for maintenance and various performances) under consideration of partial efficiency of utilized m...
Metabolic responses of chronically starved horses to refeeding with three isoenergetic diets.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 3, 1998   Volume 212, Issue 5 691-696 
Witham CL, Stull CL.To examine metabolic responses of chronically starved horses to refeeding with 3 isoenergetic diets. Methods: Uncontrolled clinical trial. Methods: 22 mature mixed-breed horses that were emaciated but otherwise clinically normal. Methods: Horses were fed 1 of 3 diets: alfalfa hay, oat hay, or a combination diet of half oat hay and half commercially prepared ration. Digestible energy of diets was gradually increased throughout the refeeding period. One pre- and 4 postprandial blood samples were obtained daily, and analyses included RBC count, Hct, and determination of hemoglobin, glucose, insul...
The effect of dietary protein on reproduction in the mare. I. The composition and evaluation of the digestibility of dietary protein from different sources.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    December 31, 1997   Volume 68, Issue 3 78-80 doi: 10.4102/jsava.v68i3.880
van Niekerk FE, van Niekerk CH.Four rations that differed in their crude protein and essential amino-acid content were compiled. Digestibility of the crude protein and essential amino-acid contents were determined biologically in a feeding trial using 4 Anglo-Arab stallions. Their respective daily diets were: Diet 1:2 kg cubes, 5 kg tef hay (Eragrostis tef); Diet 2:2 kg cubes, 5 kg lucerne hay (Medicago sativa); Diet 3:2 kg cubes, 5 kg tef hay, 200 g fishmeal; Diet 4:2 kg cubes, 5 kg lucerne hay, 200 g fishmeal. The concentrations of the amino-acids threonine, iso-leucine, leucine and arginine were increased in the total ra...
Airborne dust and aeroallergen concentrations in different sources of feed and bedding for horses.
The veterinary quarterly    December 31, 1997   Volume 19, Issue 4 154-158 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1997.9694762
Vandenput S, Istasse L, Nicks B, Lekeux P.Standardized methods were used to make quantitative and qualitative assessments of respirable dust and aeroallergens in feed and bedding for horses. Concentrations of airborne dust were measured by using a Rion particle counter, and levels of major aeroallergens implicated in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were measured by using an Andersen sampler. Laboratory conditions allowed comparison of the different sources of forage, supplements, and bedding without external influences such as ventilation, external temperature and horse activity affecting the result. Grass silages of approximate...
Vitamin A repletion in thoroughbred mares with retinyl palmitate or beta-carotene.
Journal of animal science    October 23, 1997   Volume 75, Issue 10 2684-2690 doi: 10.2527/1997.75102684x
Greiwe-Crandell KM, Kronfeld DS, Gay LS, Sklan D, Tiegs W, Harris PA.Forty-five Thoroughbred mares used in an 8-mo depletion study were kept for an additional 20 mo on the same three forage diets (15 mares each): 2-yr-old orchardgrass hay and vitamin A-free concentrate on a drylot (HC); pasture, orchardgrass/alfalfa hay, and vitamin A-free concentrate (PHC); or pasture and orchardgrass/alfalfa hay only (PH). Each diet group was divided into three subgroups, and mares (n = 5) in each group were given either retinyl palmitate (A) at twice the NRC (1989) recommended daily intake, the equivalent amount of vitamin A in the form of water-dispersible beta-carotene (B)...
Digestibility, apparent mineral absorption, and voluntary intake by horses fed alfalfa, tall fescue, and caucasian bluestem.
Journal of animal science    June 1, 1997   Volume 75, Issue 6 1651-1658 doi: 10.2527/1997.7561651x
Crozier JA, Allen VG, Jack NE, Fontenot JP, Cochran MA.Alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.), low-endophyte (< 5%) tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.), and caucasian bluestem (Bothriochloa caucasica [Trin.] C.E. Hubbard) were fed as chopped hay to six Arabian geldings (BW 441 kg; SE 2) in intake and digestibility experiments to determine nutritional value for horses at maintenance. Each experimental design was a replicated Latin square. Alfalfa was higher in DM and CP digestibility, IVDMD, apparent absorption of Ca, K, and S, and voluntary intake than the grasses (P < .05). Caucasian bluestem was higher in Zn but was lower in CP, TNC, Mg, P, K,...
Annual ryegrass toxicosis in horses.
Australian veterinary journal    December 1, 1996   Volume 74, Issue 6 465-466 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1996.tb07573.x
Creeper JH, Vale W, Walsh R.No abstract available
Effects of intermittent feed deprivation, intermittent feed deprivation with ranitidine administration, and stall confinement with ad libitum access to hay on gastric ulceration in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1996   Volume 57, Issue 11 1599-1603 
Murray MJ, Eichorn ES.To determine the effect of decreasing gastric acidity in a feed-deprivation protocol on induction of gastric ulcers, and to determine whether stall confinement may be a factor contributing to gastric ulceration in horses. Methods: 8 adult horses, 4 geldings and 4 mares, 3 to 8 years old, and 7 adult horses, 5 geldings and 2 mares, 4 to 11 years old. Methods: Gastric ulceration was induced in horses by alternating 24-hour periods of feed deprivation and ad libitum access to hay, for a total of 96 hours' feed deprivation. This protocol was repeated with the horses receiving the histamine type-2 ...
Nutrition of grazing brood mares and growing horses.
Australian veterinary journal    July 1, 1996   Volume 74, Issue 1 64-70 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1996.tb13738.x
McMeniman NP.No abstract available
A case-control study of the congenital hypothyroidism and dysmaturity syndrome of foals.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    June 1, 1996   Volume 37, Issue 6 349-358 
Allen AL, Townsend HG, Doige CE, Fretz PB.A case-control study was conducted to identify risk factors for the congenital hypothyroidism and dysmaturity syndrome of foals. A questionnaire was used during personal interviews of foal owners and farm managers to collect information on animal signalment, farm environment, and mare management. Information on 39 foals with the congenital hypothyroidism and dysmaturity syndrome were compared with 39 control foals. Foals with the syndrome had a significantly (P < 0.0001) longer gestation (357.6 d) than control foals (338.9 d). Pregnant mares that were fed greenfeed, did not receive any supplem...
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