Analyze Diet

Topic:Microbiology

Microbiology and horses explores the interactions between microorganisms and equine hosts, focusing on the role of bacteria, viruses, fungi, and other microbes in horse health and disease. This field examines the microbial flora present in various equine environments, including the gastrointestinal tract, skin, and respiratory system, and investigates how these microorganisms influence equine physiology and pathology. Research in this area includes studies on microbial infections that affect horses, the development of antimicrobial resistance, and the impact of probiotics and prebiotics on equine health. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the diversity, dynamics, and implications of microbial communities in horses, as well as the strategies for managing microbial-related diseases.
Viability of Coliform Bacteria in Antarctic Soil.
Journal of bacteriology    May 1, 1963   Volume 85, Issue 5 1121-1123 doi: 10.1128/jb.85.5.1121-1123.1963
BOYD WL, BOYD JW.Boyd, William L. (Ohio State University, Columbus) and Josephine W. Boyd. Viability of coliform bacteria in antarctic soil. J. Bacteriol. 85:1121-1123. 1963.-The distribution of coliform bacteria in soils of Ross Island and the nearby mainland was studied. None was found in almost all of the samples collected, including some from the Adelie penguin rookeries at Cape Royds and Cape Crozier and in soil at the McMurdo Base which had been recently contaminated by human sewage. Samples of pony manure left from previous expeditions were also negative, with one exception where Escherichia coli were p...
Production and fermentation of lactate by bacteria in the alimentary canal of the horse and pig.
Journal of comparative pathology    January 1, 1963   Volume 73 1-8 doi: 10.1016/s0368-1742(63)80001-6
ALEXANDER F, DAVIES ME.No abstract available
CANDIDA SILVAE SP.N., A YEAST ISOLATED FROM HUMANS AND HORSES.
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek    January 1, 1963   Volume 29 261-264 doi: 10.1007/BF02046067
VIDAL-LEIRIA M, VANUDEN N.No abstract available
On Trichomonas caballi n. sp., a protozoan parasite from the horse.
Zeitschrift fur Parasitenkunde (Berlin, Germany)    January 1, 1961   Volume 21 164-168 doi: 10.1007/BF00260021
ABRAHAM R.No abstract available
On the intestinal yeast flora of horses, sheep, goats and swine.
Journal of general microbiology    December 1, 1958   Volume 19, Issue 3 435-445 doi: 10.1099/00221287-19-3-435
VAN UDEN N, DO SOUSA LC, FARINHA M.From the caeca of 252 horses, 503 sheep, 250 goats and 250 swine, 486 yeast isolates belonging to 28 species and 1 variety were obtained. The distribution of the yeasts of any species and for Candida albicans respectively was: horses, 52·4%, 4·4%; sheep, 6·8%, 4·2%; goats, 6·4%, 08%; swine, 88·8%, 9·2%. The suitability of the sheep and goats as hosts for yeasts of any species seems very limited. The most frequent occurrences for single species were: Candida slooffii in swine (48·4%), Trichosporon cutaneum in horses (21·8%) and Saccharomyces tellustris (Candida bovina) in swine (14%...
[Studies on the interactions between bacteria and ascarides in intestinal zoonoses of hogs and horses]. EMANUILOFF I.No abstract available
Ringworm in horses caused by the dermatophyte, Microsporum gypsum.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1957   Volume 131, Issue 7 329-332 
KAPLAN W, HOPPING JL, GEORG LK.No abstract available
The intestinal flora in horses with certain skin changes; with special reference to the coliform microbes.
Acta pathologica et microbiologica Scandinavica. Supplementum    January 1, 1957   Volume 119 1-102 
MANSSON I.No abstract available
Isolation of the dermatophyte, Microsporum gypseum, from a horse with ringworm.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 15, 1956   Volume 129, Issue 8 381-383 
FOSNAUGH CJ, GEORG LK, KAPLAN W.No abstract available
The effect of neotetrazolium on virus growth.
Transactions of the New York Academy of Sciences    March 1, 1955   Volume 17, Issue 5 389-397 doi: 10.1111/j.2164-0947.1955.tb00409.x
KODZA H, ANTOPOL W.No abstract available
Facilitation of demonstration of hemolytic streptococci in throat swabs by the use of nucleate and a mixture of sheep and horse blood.
Acta pathologica et microbiologica Scandinavica    January 1, 1955   Volume 36, Issue 2 187-192 doi: 10.1111/j.1699-0463.1955.tb04587.x
GRUBB R, NYMAN M.No abstract available
[Quantitative studies on acidophil bacteria in the intestines in horses].
Mikrobiologiia    July 1, 1954   Volume 23, Issue 4 474-476 
ULENDEEV AI.No abstract available
In vivo observations on the ciliate protozoa inhabiting the large intestine of the horse.
Journal of general microbiology    December 1, 1953   Volume 9, Issue 3 376-384 doi: 10.1099/00221287-9-3-376
ADAMS KM.The ciliate population of the large intestine of the horse shows large, daily variations. The ventral colon is the site where the ciliate fauna varies most. Two species, Cycloposthium edentatum and C. dentiferum, became established in the large intestine after passage through the stomach and small intestine. The introduction of new species into the ventral colon caused significant changes in the fauna of that part of the gut.
The characters of streptococci isolated from the uteri of thoroughbred mares in Ireland.
Journal of comparative pathology    October 1, 1952   Volume 62, Issue 4 260-265 doi: 10.1016/s0368-1742(52)80027-x
CRONIN MT.No abstract available
Fermentative activities of some members of the normal coccal flora of the horse’s large intestine.
Journal of comparative pathology    October 1, 1952   Volume 62, Issue 4 252-259 doi: 10.1016/s0368-1742(52)80026-8
ALEXANDER F, MACPHERSON MJ, OXFORD AE.No abstract available.
Comparative morphology of the skin-inhabiting microfilariae of man, cattle, and equines in Guatemala.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    March 1, 1952   Volume 1, Issue 2 250-261 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1952.1.250
GIBSON CL.No abstract available
The quantity and distribution of the ciliate protozoa in the large intestine of the horse.
Parasitology    December 1, 1951   Volume 41, Issue 3-4 301-311 doi: 10.1017/s0031182000084158
ADAM KM.No abstract available
Detection by tissue culture of an organism resembling Histoplasma capsulatum in an apparently healthy horse.
Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)    November 1, 1951   Volume 78, Issue 2 447-450 doi: 10.3181/00379727-78-19099
RANDALL CC, ORR MF, SCHELL FG.Intracellular organisms resembling Histoplasma capsulatum have been observed in apparently normal amnio-allantoic membrane and adult horse spleen maintained in tissue culture. The significance of this finding and comparison with another fungus Cryptococcus jarciminosus is discussed.
A biochemical and bacteriologic study of mare’s milk.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1950   Volume 117, Issue 883 303-305 
DRURY AR, BRYAN CS, HUTTON JP.No abstract available
[Oxygen decomposition of cellulose by the intestinal bacteria of the horse].
Medycyna doswiadczalna i mikrobiologia    January 1, 1950   Volume 2, Issue 2 132-133 
KAKOLOWNA H.No abstract available
A motile streptococcus from an aborted equine fetus.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1948   Volume 38, Issue 3 313-315 
BRUNER DW, EDWARDS PR.No abstract available
Direct Isolation of Pasteurella-Like Microorganisms from Brains of Horses Suffering from So-Called Cornstalk Disease.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    April 19, 1935   Volume 81, Issue 2103 387-388 doi: 10.1126/science.81.2103.387-a
Graham R.No abstract available
A Pasteurella-Like Microorganism in the Brains of Horses Suffering from So-Called Cornstalk Disease.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    February 8, 1935   Volume 81, Issue 2093 153-154 doi: 10.1126/science.81.2093.153
Graham R.No abstract available
The Relationship of the Flavobacterium Ophthalmiae to Periodic Ophthalmia in Horses.
Transactions of the American Ophthalmological Society    January 1, 1929   Volume 27 131-148 
Woods AC, Burky EL.No abstract available
A Note on the Production of Antipneumococcus Sera.
The Journal of experimental medicine    May 1, 1917   Volume 25, Issue 5 629-632 doi: 10.1084/jem.25.5.629
Wadsworth AB, Kirkbride MB.Horses immunized to Type I pneumococci developed serum, 0.1 cc. of which protected against 0.5 cc. of a virulent culture, 0.000001 cc. of which killed mice in less than 40 hours. Protective tests of serum from horses immunized to Type II organisms varied, 0.1 cc. protecting, however, in certain instances against 0.1 and 0.01 cc. of virulent homologous culture. Types I and II sera obtained in our experiments with culture sediment and whole culture did not vary markedly for a given type and corresponded closely in their protective titer with samples of sera received from The Rockefeller Institut...
PARAMENINGOCOCCUS AND ITS ANTISERUM.
The Journal of experimental medicine    September 1, 1914   Volume 20, Issue 3 201-217 doi: 10.1084/jem.20.3.201
Wollstein M.The parameningococci of Dopter are culturally indistinguishable from true or normal meningococci, but serologically they exhibit differences as regards agglutination, opsonization, and complement deviation. Because of the variations and irregularities of serum reactions existing among otherwise normal strains of meningococci it does not seem either possible or desirable to separate the parameningococci into a strictly definite class. It appears desirable to consider them as constituting a special strain among meningococci not, however, wholly consistent in itself. The distinctions in serum rea...
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