Analyze Diet

Topic:Hay

Hay is a primary forage source for horses, consisting of dried grasses or legumes harvested and stored for feeding. It serves as a significant component of the equine diet, providing essential fiber, energy, and nutrients necessary for maintaining digestive health and overall well-being. Common types of hay fed to horses include timothy, alfalfa, and orchard grass, each varying in nutritional content and suitability for different dietary needs. The quality and nutritional value of hay can be influenced by factors such as the plant species, stage of maturity at harvest, and storage conditions. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the composition, nutritional evaluation, and impact of hay on equine health and performance.
Impact of water-soaking on the nutrient composition of UK hays.
The Veterinary record    March 27, 2014   Volume 174, Issue 18 452 doi: 10.1136/vr.102074
Mack SJ, Dugdale AH, Argo CM, Morgan RA, McGowan CM.No abstract available
Mobile bag starch prececal disappearance and postprandial glycemic response of four forms of barley in horses.
Journal of animal science    March 25, 2014   Volume 92, Issue 5 2087-2093 doi: 10.2527/jas.2013-6850
Philippeau C, Varloud M, Julliand V.To determine prececal starch digestibili-ty and estimate glucose uptake from the digestion of 4 forms of barley in the small intestine, 4 mature cecally fistulated geldings (449 ± 41 kg BW) fed a 62:38 (wt/wt) meadow hay:concentrate diet at 1.7 kg DM/100 kg BW were included in a 4 × 4 Latin square design experiment. During each period, horses received 80% DM of their concentrate as 1 of the 4 forms of a same batch of barley, whole grain, 2.5 mm ground, steam flaked, and pelleted. Hay was offered in 2 equal meals and concentrate in 2 unequal meals. The starch supply in the morning meal amount...
Intake estimation of horses grazing tall fescue (Lolium arundinaceum) or fed tall fescue hay.
Journal of animal science    March 18, 2014   Volume 92, Issue 5 2304-2308 doi: 10.2527/jas.2013-7119
Chavez SJ, Siciliano PD, Huntington GB.Six mature geldings of light horse breeds (557 ± 37 kg) were randomly assigned to a nontoxic endophyte-infected tall fescue hay (n = 3) or pasture treatment (n = 3) in a crossover design with 14-d periods to estimate DMI with alkane markers and to compare DMI of hay and pasture. When fed pasture, horses were housed in stalls from 0700 to 1300 h daily with access to water and then grazed pasture as a group in a single 0.4 ha pasture from 1300 to 0700 h. When fed hay, horses were maintained individually in stalls and given access to hay ad libitum from 1300 to 0700 h. All horses were individual...
Environmental exposures and airway inflammation in young thoroughbred horses.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    March 12, 2014   Volume 28, Issue 3 918-924 doi: 10.1111/jvim.12333
Ivester KM, Couëtil LL, Moore GE, Zimmerman NJ, Raskin RE.Inflammatory airway disease (IAD) in horses is a widespread, performance-limiting syndrome believed to develop in response to inhaled irritants in the barn environment. Objective: To evaluate changes in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) cytology and exposure to particulates, endotoxin, and ammonia during horses' first month in training. Methods: Forty-nine client-owned 12- to 36-month-old Thoroughbred horses entering race training. Methods: In this prospective cohort study, a convenience sample of horses was assigned to be fed hay from a net (n = 16), whereas the remaining horses were fed ha...
Effect of physical training on nutrient digestibility and faecal fermentative parameters in Standardbred horses.
Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition    March 3, 2014   Volume 98, Issue 6 1081-1087 doi: 10.1111/jpn.12177
Goachet AG, Harris P, Philippeau C, Julliand V.This study aimed at evaluating, in previously inactive Standardbreds horses, the effect of 5 weeks of an exercise training programme on nutrient digestibility and faecal fermentative parameters (FFPs). As an increase in digestibility had previously been reported in trained endurance horses, we hypothesized that similar results would be found in horses being trained for other types of exercise on a different type of diet. After 3 weeks of dietary adaptation, a digestibility trial (DT1) was undertaken, over 3 days, in eight untrained Standardbreds with a fresh faecal sample being collected on th...
Anaerobic digestion of horse dung mixed with different bedding materials in an upflow solid-state (UASS) reactor at mesophilic conditions.
Bioresource technology    February 17, 2014   Volume 158 111-118 doi: 10.1016/j.biortech.2014.02.034
Böske J, Wirth B, Garlipp F, Mumme J, Van den Weghe H.Aim of this study was to investigate the use of upflow anaerobic solid-state (UASS) digestion for treating horse manure. Biochemical methane potential (BMP) tests conducted for varying mixtures of dung (hay and silage feed) and bedding material (wheat straw, flax, hemp, wood chips) showed that straw mixed with hay horse dung has the highest potential of [Formula: see text] . Continuous mesophilic digestion was conducted for 238 days using a single-stage UASS reactor (27 L) and a two-stage UASS system with an anaerobic filter (AF, 21 L). Increasing the organic loading rate (OLR) from 2.5 to 4.5...
Dietary experience modifies horses’ feeding behavior and selection patterns of three macronutrient rich diets.
Journal of animal science    February 4, 2014   Volume 92, Issue 4 1524-1530 doi: 10.2527/jas.2012-5579
Redgate SE, Cooper JJ, Hall S, Eady P, Harris PA.Choice feeding is often used to investigate an animal's nutritional requirements and dietary preferences. A problem with this approach is that animals with long gut transit times, such as the horse, may find it difficult to associate a chosen food with its nutritional consequence when alternative foods are presented simultaneously. One solution is to present foods singly for a period of time before a simultaneous choice session to allow the development of learned associations. This method was used to determine if horse's voluntary intake and feeding behavior was influenced by the macronutrient...
Apparent digestibility of broken rice in horses using in vivo and in vitro methods.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    January 18, 2014   Volume 8, Issue 2 245-249 doi: 10.1017/S175173111300205X
De Marco M, Peiretti PG, Miraglia N, Bergero D.The aim of this study was to assess the apparent digestibility of broken rice using total collection of feces and the pepsin-cellulase in vitro technique to provide updated and more accurate digestion coefficients for this by-product when fed to horses. The in vivo digestibility trial was consecutively performed, using five adult geldings, weighing 555.6 kg on average. First, hay was given as the only feedstuff, while second, the experimental diet consisted of the same hay plus broken rice at a forage-to-concentrate ratio of 70/30 (on dry matter (DM) basis). Feces were collected over 6 days pr...
No effect of moderate or high concentrate allowance on growth parameters in weanling Warmblood foals fed late-cut haylage as forage.
Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition    January 15, 2014   Volume 98, Issue 5 886-893 doi: 10.1111/jpn.12153
Mack JK, Remler HP, Senckenberg E, Kienzle E.Two groups of Warmblood foals from the Bavarian federal stud participated in the study beginning from the age of approximately 6 months. The foals were offered a late 1st cut of haylage, oats and foal starter feed. For 2 months after weaning, group 'R' (15 foals) received an amount of oats to provide a total digestible energy supply meeting the recommendations of the German Society of Nutrition Physiology (GfE), whereas the other group 'A' (16 foals) was offered a higher amount of oats (surplus of approximately 1.3 kg/animal/day). Concentrates were fed individually twice daily; total daily ...
Effect of period, water temperature and agitation on loss of water-soluble carbohydrates and protein from grass hay: implications for equine feeding management.
The Veterinary record    December 13, 2013   Volume 174, Issue 3 68 doi: 10.1136/vr.101820
Longland AC, Barfoot C, Harris PA.The effects of different water-soaking treatments on removal of water-soluble carbohydrates (WSC), WSC constituents and protein from four UK hays were determined. Hays were soaked in water for up to 16 hours at mean temperatures of 8°C, 16°C, in hot tap water (initially 49°C) or agitated and rinsed in clean water at 16°C. Initial hay WSC contents ranged from 154 to 216 g/kg dry matter. Losses of WSC from hays after 16 hours soaking at 8°C, 16°C, 16°C plus agitation and 49°C averaged 28, 46, 49 and 44 per cent, respectively. Corresponding percentage losses of fructan were 16, 37, 39 and...
The effect of a hay grid feeder on feed consumption and measurement of the gastric pH using an intragastric electrode device in horses: a preliminary report.
Equine veterinary journal    November 18, 2013   Volume 46, Issue 4 484-487 doi: 10.1111/evj.12175
Aristizabal F, Nieto J, Yamout S, Snyder J.Obesity and gastric ulceration are highly prevalent in horses. Management modifications for preventing squamous gastric ulceration include frequent feeding and free access to pasture; however, these practices may predispose horses to obesity. Objective: To compare the percentage of hay consumed, intragastric pH and horse activity between feeding from the ground and a hay grid feeder. Methods: Crossover experimental study. Methods: A pH electrode was inserted into the stomach to record the intragastric pH for 48 h. Horses received 1% of their body weight in grass hay twice a day. Horses were ...
Effect of hay steaming on forage nutritive values and dry matter intake by horses.
Journal of animal science    October 21, 2013   Volume 91, Issue 12 5813-5820 doi: 10.2527/jas.2013-6333
Earing JE, Hathaway MR, Sheaffer CC, Hetchler BP, Jacobson LD, Paulson JC, Martinson KL.Management strategies for horses with respiratory disease include soaking hay before feeding. Hay steaming is an alternative to this practice; however, little is known about its impact on forage nutritive values or intake. The objective was to determine the effect of steaming on forage nutritive value and intake by horses. Two alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.)-orchardgrass (Dactylis glomerata L.) mixed hays were evaluated: a low moldy (NM) and moderately moldy (MM) hay. Six mature horses were used in a 10 d crossover design. Three horses were assigned to each hay type and treatments were switched o...
Temporal feeding pattern may influence reproduction efficiency, the example of breeding mares.
PloS one    September 30, 2013   Volume 8, Issue 9 e73858 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0073858
Benhajali H, Ezzaouia M, Lunel C, Charfi F, Hausberger M.Discomfort in farm animals may be induced by inappropriate types or timing of food supplies. Thus, time restriction of meals and lack of roughage have been shown to be one source of emergence of oral stereotypies and abnormal behaviour in horses which have evolved to eat high-fibre diets in small amounts over long periods of time. This feeding pattern is often altered in domestic environment where horses are often fed low fibre meals that can be rapidly consumed. This study aimed at determining the effect of the temporal pattern of feeding on reproductive efficiency of breeding mares, One hund...
[Nutritional laminitis–preventive measures for the obese horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe G, Grosstiere/Nutztiere    August 21, 2013   Volume 41, Issue 4 257-265 
Kienzle E, Fritz J.Nutrition-induced laminitis is often caused by i) fermentation of large amounts of carbohydrates in the hindgut (usually fructans from grass or starch from cereals), which cause the release and absorption of microbial toxins and ii) insulin resistance induced by being overweight (equine metabolic syndrome). Both causes can act together. Overweight horses with a history of laminitis need to reduce body weight to prevent further incidences of laminitis. Weight reduction occurs normally on a diet of late-cut hay, a hay-straw mixture (maximally one third straw to prevent constipation) or grass see...
Effect of hay dust extract and cyathostomin antigen stimulation on cytokine expression by PBMC in horses with recurrent airway obstruction.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    August 5, 2013   Volume 155, Issue 4 229-237 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2013.07.005
Lanz S, Gerber V, Marti E, Rettmer H, Klukowska-Rötzler J, Gottstein B, Matthews JB, Pirie S, Hamza E.Equine recurrent airway obstruction (RAO) is an inflammatory, obstructive airway disease induced by exposure of susceptible horses to inhaled organic dust particles. The immunological process underlying RAO is still unclear. Previous studies have shown that RAO is linked to the Interleukin-4 receptor (IL-4R) gene in one Warmblood family (F1), but not in another (F2). It has also been shown that in F1, but not in F2, RAO is associated with resistance against parasites, suggesting that this association may have an immuno-genetic basis. Therefore, we hypothesized that the T helper (h)1/Th2/regula...
Influence of maternal plane of nutrition on mares and their foals: determination of mare performance and voluntary dry matter intake during late pregnancy using a dual-marker system.
Journal of animal science    July 3, 2013   Volume 91, Issue 9 4208-4215 doi: 10.2527/jas.2013-6373
Winsco KN, Coverdale JA, Wickersham TA, Lucia JL, Hammer CJ.Thirty pregnant mares (538 to 695 kg BW; 4 to 19 yr of age) were used to evaluate the effects of plane of nutrition on DMI of hay and mare performance (BW, BCS, and rump fat) during the last third of pregnancy. Mares were divided into 4 blocks by their expected foaling date and randomly assigned within block to either a hay or concentrate plus hay diet (concentrate fed at 0.75% BW, as-fed basis) with 15 mares per treatment. Treatments began 110 d before expected foaling date (230 d of gestation) and terminated at parturition. Mares were housed by block and allowed ad libitum access to coastal ...
Effects of Saccharomyces cerevisiae supplementation on apparent total tract digestibility of nutrients and fermentation profile in healthy horses.
Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition    May 10, 2013   Volume 97 Suppl 1 115-120 doi: 10.1111/jpn.12043
Mackenthun E, Coenen M, Vervuert I.Supplementation with Saccharomyces cerevisiae (SC) in horses may have some potential to modify microbial populations and thereby improve fibre digestibility. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of SC on apparent total tract digestibility (ATTD) of nutrients, with a special focus on fibre digestion in healthy horses. The fermentation profile of microbial populations was another focus of interest. Twelve geldings were randomly assigned to three groups. The basal diet consisted of cracked corn (2 g starch/kg body weight [BW]) and hay (1.2 kg/100 kg BW). During adaptation (3 weeks...
Epidemiology of intoxication of domestic animals by plants in Europe.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    April 6, 2013   Volume 197, Issue 2 163-168 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2013.03.007
Cortinovis C, Caloni F.This review focuses on some of the most important poisonous plants in Europe and provides an overview of the poisoning episodes that have occurred in European countries. Poisoning of livestock and companion animals by plants is a relatively common occurrence. In Europe livestock and horses are commonly poisoned by Datura stramonium (Jimson weed), Senecio spp. (ragworts and groundsels), Quercus spp. (oak), Taxus baccata (European yew), Nerium oleander (oleander), Pteridium aquilinum (bracken fern), Robinia pseudoacacia (black locust) and Rhododendron spp. (rhododendrons and azaleas). Poisoning ...
Fresh and preserved green fodder modify effects of urinary acidifiers on urine pH of horses.
Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition    March 30, 2013   Volume 98, Issue 2 239-245 doi: 10.1111/jpn.12071
Goren G, Fritz J, Dillitzer N, Hipp B, Kienzle E.Hay stabilises urine pH in horses. It is unknown whether this is an effect of structure or of chemical composition. In this study, four ponies (230-384 kg body weight [BW]) were fed six different diets with either a structure or a composition similar to hay with and without acidifiers in a cross-over experimental design in amounts to maintain body weight with the following main compounds: Fresh grass (GRASS), alfalfa hay (ALF), grass cobs (COBS), grass silage (SIL), straw (STR) or extruded straw (STRe) for 2 to 10 days. Urine pH was measured in all trials, blood pH, blood base excess and bicar...
Effects of phytase supplementation in mature horses fed alfalfa hay and pelleted concentrate diets.
Journal of animal science    February 13, 2013   Volume 91, Issue 4 1719-1727 doi: 10.2527/jas.2012-5081
Lavin TE, Nielsen BD, Zingsheim JN, O'Connor-Robison CI, Link JE, Hill GM, Shelton J.An experiment was conducted to study P digestibility in mature horses because of the growing environmental concerns regarding P runoff and previous equine research focused mostly on young and growing animals or used ponies as a model. Phytase supplementation of swine and poultry diets can result in greater phytate-P digestibility, leading to a decreased need for inorganic P supplementation and a decrease in P excreted to the environment; this, however, has not been demonstrated in the horse. Six mature Arabian geldings were fed 6 diets consisting of pelleted concentrate and alfalfa hay. The co...
The effect of very low food intake on digestive physiology and forage digestibility in horses.
Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition    February 13, 2013   Volume 98, Issue 1 107-118 doi: 10.1111/jpn.12053
Clauss M, Schiele K, Ortmann S, Fritz J, Codron D, Hummel J, Kienzle E.Equid digestion is often conceptualized as a high-throughput/low-efficiency system, in particular compared with ruminants. It is commonly assumed that ruminants have an advantage when resources are limited; the effect of low food intake on digestive physiology of horses has, however, not been explored to our knowledge. We used four adult ponies [initial body mass (BM) 288 ± 65 kg] in two subsequent trials with grass hay-only diets [in dry matter (DM): hay1, mid-early cut, crude protein (CP) 10.5%, neutral detergent fibre (NDF) 67.6%; hay2, late cut, CP 5.8%, NDF 69.5%], each fed subsequent...
Dry conditions hitting horse owners, rescue groups in the wallet.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 6, 2012   Volume 241, Issue 8 980-985 
Larkin M.No abstract available
Adaption of horses to a novel dynamic feeding system: movement and behavioural responses.
Equine veterinary journal    December 6, 2012   Volume 45, Issue 4 481-484 doi: 10.1111/evj.12002
Hampson BA, de Laat MA, Monot J, Bailliu D, Pollitt CC.Many domestic horses and ponies are sedentary and obese due to confinement to small paddocks and stables and a diet of infrequent, high-energy rations. Severe health consequences can be associated with this altered lifestyle. Objective: The aims of this study were to investigate the ability of horses to learn to use a dynamic feeder system and determine the movement and behavioural responses of horses to the novel system. Methods: A dynamic feed station was developed to encourage horses to exercise in order to access ad libitum hay. Five pairs of horses (n = 10) were studied using a randomised...
Equine pre-caecal and total tract digestibility of individual carbohydrate fractions and their effect on caecal pH response.
Archives of animal nutrition    November 8, 2012   Volume 66, Issue 6 490-506 doi: 10.1080/1745039X.2012.740311
Brøkner C, Austbø D, Næsset JA, Knudsen KE, Tauson AH.The working hypothesis was that a minor postprandial caecal pH decline would affect apparent total tract digestibility (ATTD) of the fibre fraction in horses and, hence, that soluble fibre would amplify fermentation and consequently increase ATTD of fibre. This study was a 4 × 4 Latin Square design with a sequence of 17 days adaptation to the ration followed by 8 sampling days. The feed rations consisted of only timothy hay (Group H), hay plus molassed sugar beet pulp combined with either whole oats (Group OB) or barley (Group BB) and hay plus loose chaff based concentrate (Group M). Four hor...
Dietary restriction in combination with a nutraceutical supplement for the management of equine metabolic syndrome in horses.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    November 8, 2012   Volume 196, Issue 2 153-159 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2012.10.007
McGowan CM, Dugdale AH, Pinchbeck GL, Argo CM.Few studies have examined the effect of dietary restriction in horses with equine metabolic syndrome (EMS). This study aimed to determine improvements in insulin sensitivity following dietary restriction for 6 weeks, and to determine if the improvement would be greater in horses receiving short-chain fructo-oligosaccharides (sc-FOS). Dietary management involved feeding grass hay, restricted to 1.25% of body mass (BM) as daily dry matter intake and soaked in cold water prior to feeding, with the addition of a vitamin and mineral nutraceutical supplement with or without the addition of sc-FOS (1...
Concurrent ivermectin and Solanum spp. toxicosis in a herd of horses.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    September 4, 2012   Volume 26, Issue 6 1439-1442 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.2012.00996.x
Norman TE, Chaffin MK, Norton PL, Coleman MC, Stoughton WB, Mays T.Representatives from a herd of horses with acute onset of neurologic signs after administration of ivermectin presented for evaluation and treatment. Objective: Describe clinical signs of horses intoxicated by ingestion of Solanum sp. and administered ivermectin. Methods: Six of 11 affected unrelated horses presented for evaluation and treatment. The remaining 5 affected horses were treated at the farm. Four additional horses, housed separately, were unaffected. Methods: Case series is presented. Serum ivermectin concentrations were evaluated in the 6 hospitalized horses. The remnants of the t...
Increased hypoxia-inducible factor 1α expression in lung cells of horses with recurrent airway obstruction.
BMC veterinary research    May 23, 2012   Volume 8 64 doi: 10.1186/1746-6148-8-64
Toussaint M, Fievez L, Desmet CJ, Pirottin D, Farnir F, Bureau F, Lekeux P.Recurrent airway obstruction (RAO, also known as equine heaves) is an inflammatory condition caused by exposure of susceptible horses to organic dusts in hay. The immunological processes responsible for the development and the persistence of airway inflammation are still largely unknown. Hypoxia-inducible factor (Hif) is mainly known as a major regulator of energy homeostasis and cellular adaptation to hypoxia. More recently however, Hif also emerged as an essential regulator of innate immune responses. Here, we aimed at investigating the potential involvement of Hif1-α in myeloid cells in ho...
Electromyographic evaluation of masseter muscle activity in horses fed (i) different types of roughage and (ii) maize after different hay allocations.
Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition    March 29, 2012   Volume 97, Issue 3 515-521 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0396.2012.01292.x
Vervuert I, Brüssow N, Bochnia M, Cí·¯ord D, Coenen M.The aims of this study were to monitor electromyographic (EMG) activity of masseter muscle in healthy horses fed (i) different types of roughage and (ii) maize after different hay allocations. Four horses were offered the following three diets ad libitum: hay, haylage or straw/alfalfa chaff (SAC). In a second trial, four horses were fed cracked maize (CM) and hay in three different orders: (i) CM after a 12-h overnight fast; (ii) CM immediately after restricted hay intake (0.6 kg hay/100 kg BW); or 3) CM after hay intake ad libitum. The activity of the masseter muscle was determined by EMG...
Apparent digestibility of wheat bran and extruded flax in horses determined from the total collection of feces and acid-insoluble ash as an internal marker.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    March 23, 2012   Volume 6, Issue 2 227-231 doi: 10.1017/S1751731111001297
De Marco M, Miraglia N, Peiretti PG, Bergero D.Several studies have reported data on comparisons between two methods: the total collection of feces and the internal markers method. The aim of this study was to assess the apparent digestibility of two concentrates and to compare the apparent digestion coefficients using the total collection of feces and acid-insoluble ash (AIA) as the internal marker method. In 2009, six adult geldings aged between 3 and 11 years, with an average weight per trial of 543, 540 and 542 kg, respectively, were used to determine the apparent digestibility by means of three in vivo digestibility trials on hay, hay...
Expression of thymic stromal lymphopoietin in equine recurrent airway obstruction.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    January 31, 2012   Volume 146, Issue 1 46-52 doi: 10.1016/j.vetimm.2012.01.019
Klukowska-Rötzler J, Marti E, Lavoie JP, Ainsworth DM, Gerber V, Zurbriggen A, Janda J.Thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) is a cytokine involved in lymphocyte development. In humans and mice, TSLP drives the differentiation of T helper 2 (Th2) cells and the development of allergic inflammation. The equine TSLP gene has been previously identified and characterized, but its role in the pathogenesis of equine allergic diseases is not known. Our objective was to assess the expression of TSLP in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells and in primary bronchial epithelial cells (BEC) isolated from horses with recurrent airway obstruction (RAO). RNA was isolated from BAL cells sampled from ...
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