Analyze Diet

Topic:Horse Management

Horse management encompasses the practices and techniques used to care for and maintain horses in various settings, including stables, pastures, and performance environments. This area of study covers a range of activities such as feeding, grooming, housing, exercise, and health monitoring to ensure the well-being and optimal performance of horses. Effective horse management requires an understanding of equine behavior, nutrition, and physiology, as well as the ability to implement routine care practices and respond to health issues. This page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methods, strategies, and outcomes associated with different horse management practices.
Some Thoughts on Foot-Sore Horses in Our Cities, with a View to Ameliorate or Prevent the Same.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    July 1, 1901   Volume 22, Issue 7 415-419 
Williams C.No abstract available
Horses in the Boer War.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    July 1, 1901   Volume 22, Issue 7 464-472 
No abstract available
The Callosities Upon Horses’ Legs.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    July 20, 1900   Volume 12, Issue 290 113-114 doi: 10.1126/science.12.290.113-b
Irwell L.No abstract available
Country Almost Cleared of Salable Horses.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    May 1, 1900   Volume 21, Issue 5 283-285 
No abstract available
Equine Foods.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    January 1, 1895   Volume 16, Issue 1 59 
No abstract available
Importation of Horses.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    August 1, 1892   Volume 13, Issue 8 491-495 
No abstract available
The Feeding of Horses.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    July 1, 1892   Volume 20, Issue 491 4 doi: 10.1126/science.ns-20.491.4
No abstract available
Physical Condition of Horses for Military Purposes.
The Journal of comparative medicine and veterinary archives    February 1, 1890   Volume 11, Issue 2 120-132 
Fleming G.No abstract available
The Home of Rest for Horses.
The Hospital    November 9, 1889   Volume 7, Issue 163 86 
No abstract available
Toothache of Horses.
The Homoeopathic physician    April 1, 1887   Volume 7, Issue 4 132 
McCart TS.No abstract available
Some points in the evolution of the horses.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    January 1, 1886   Volume 7, Issue 152 13 doi: 10.1126/science.ns-7.152.13
Scott WB.No abstract available
The Care of Horses.
Hall's journal of health    October 1, 1885   Volume 32, Issue 10 15-16 
No abstract available
Feeding Horses.
Hall's journal of health    September 1, 1884   Volume 31, Issue 9 174-176 
No abstract available
Feeding Horses.
Hall\'s journal of health    February 1, 1883   Volume 30, Issue 2 41-43 
No abstract available
Feeding Horses.
Hall's journal of health    July 1, 1882   Volume 29, Issue 7 351-353 
No abstract available
Equine Cemeteries.
The Journal of comparative medicine and surgery    January 1, 1882   Volume 3, Issue 1 53 
No abstract available
When to Feed Grain to Horses.
Hall's journal of health    September 1, 1881   Volume 28, Issue 9 358 
No abstract available
Shall Our Horses Wear Shoes?
The Journal of comparative medicine and surgery    July 1, 1881   Volume 2, Issue 3 178-182 
No abstract available
Watering Horses.
Hall's journal of health    May 1, 1881   Volume 28, Issue 5 196 
No abstract available
Heavy Draught Breeding Horses.
The Journal of comparative medicine and surgery    January 1, 1881   Volume 2, Issue 1 47 
No abstract available
Account of the Employment of Very Large Quantities of the Ærugo Æris, Exhibited Internally to Horses, with a View to the Cure of Glanders. Lawson R.No abstract available
Crabgrass as an equine pasture forage: impact of establishment method on yield, nutrient composition, and horse preference.
   March 18, 2026  
Warm-season grasses (WSG) incorporated into traditional cool-season rotational grazing systems to increase summer yields are typically established in monoculture in separate pasture areas. Few studies have evaluated alternative interseeded establishment of WSG, despite potential benefits for improving biodiversity and land-use efficiency. The objective of this study was to determine the impact of establishment method (monoculture vs. interseeded) on crabgrass pasture forage yield, nutritive value, and preference under equine grazing. Three adult standardbred mares grazed two main plots on two ...
Hoof kick injuries in unmounted equestrians. Improving accident analysis and prevention by introducing an accident and emergency based relational database.
   March 18, 2026  
To assess injury patterns attributable to horse kicks, to raise the issue of preventive measures, and to evaluate the role of modern accident and emergency department computer software. Methods: Data analysis using a new kind of full electronic medical record. Results: Seventeen kicked equestrians were unmounted at the time of injury. Eight of seventeen patients sustained contusions of the extremities, the back, and the trunk. In nine patients an isolated facial injury was diagnosed. Five of nine patients needed referrals to the department of plastic surgery because of the complexity of the fa...
Genetic diversity and origin of the feral horses in Theodore Roosevelt National Park.
   March 18, 2026  
Feral horses in Theodore Roosevelt National Park (TRNP) represent an iconic era of the North Dakota Badlands. Their uncertain history raises management questions regarding origins, genetic diversity, and long-term genetic viability. Hair samples with follicles were collected from 196 horses in the Park and used to sequence the control region of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and to profile 12 autosomal short tandem repeat (STR) markers. Three mtDNA haplotypes found in the TRNP horses belonged to haplogroups L and B. The control region variation was low with haplotype diversity of 0.5271, nucleotide...
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