Analyze Diet

Topic:Stud Management

Stud management involves the systematic and strategic breeding of horses to enhance desirable traits, maintain genetic diversity, and ensure the health and welfare of both mares and stallions. This practice encompasses a range of activities, including the selection of breeding pairs, monitoring of reproductive health, and management of breeding cycles. Key aspects of stud management include assessing genetic compatibility, managing nutrition and health care, and implementing breeding technologies such as artificial insemination or embryo transfer. Effective stud management requires a comprehensive understanding of equine genetics, reproductive physiology, and husbandry practices. This page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore various facets of stud management, including genetic evaluation, reproductive technologies, and the impact of management practices on breeding outcomes.
[Fertility of English thoroughbred mares at the Napajedla horse-breeding farm].
Veterinarni medicina    January 1, 1971   Volume 16, Issue 6 393-403 
Munk Z, Vrba Z.No abstract available
Effect of month and stallion on seminal characteristics and sexual behavior.
Journal of animal science    October 1, 1970   Volume 31, Issue 4 713-728 doi: 10.2527/jas1970.314713x
Pickett BW, Faulkner LC, Sutherland TM.No abstract available
[Experiments to influence the estrus of thoroughbred mares by changing the duration of daylight under practical breeding conditions].
Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 1, 1969   Volume 76, Issue 23 672-676 
Merkt H, Lepel JD.No abstract available
Reproductive efficiency on fourteen horse farms.
Journal of animal science    March 1, 1968   Volume 27, Issue 2 434-438 doi: 10.2527/jas1968.272434x
Hutton CA, Meacham TN.No abstract available
[Actino-bacillary septicemia as an enzootic in a breeding stud of mares].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    January 1, 1968   Volume 15, Issue 1 41-59 
Zakopal J, Nesvadba J.No abstract available
The time of foaling of thoroughbred mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    April 1, 1967   Volume 13, Issue 2 341-343 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0130341
Rossdale PD, Short RV.No abstract available
[Contagious abortion caused by viruses in mares. Protocol of the course of the spread of an ERP epidemic on a trotting horse stud farm].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    February 1, 1967   Volume 54, Issue 2 75-83 
Arbeiter K, Lamatsch O, Mayer P.No abstract available
[Serologic investigation for the demonstration of antibodies against the rhinopneumonitis virus (viral agent of abortion in mares) in studs].
Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    November 1, 1966   Volume 73, Issue 21 536-539 
Petzoldt K, Lindemann L, Merkt H.No abstract available
Studies on efficiency of reproduction in Indian stabled horses.
The Indian veterinary journal    August 1, 1966   Volume 43, Issue 8 721-726 
Hadi MA.No abstract available
Breeding horses in the United States.
The Veterinarian    June 1, 1966   Volume 4, Issue 1 47-55 
Ensminger EM.No abstract available
[Horse breeding in Austria].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    April 1, 1966   Volume 53, Issue 4 235-245 
Stelzer F.No abstract available
Use of the Artificial Vagina for Equine Semen Collection.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 15, 1964   Volume 144 879-882 
ASBURY AC, HUGHES JP.No abstract available
The longevity and mortality of thoroughbred stallions.
Journal of gerontology    January 1, 1959   Volume 14, Issue 1 9-10 doi: 10.1093/geronj/14.1.9
COMFORT A.No abstract available
[Leptospirosis and ophthalmia in the horse; clinical findings in a thoroughbred stud farm].
Revue de pathologie generale et de physiologie clinique    March 1, 1954   Volume 54, Issue 656 480-487 
MARCENAC .No abstract available
Studies of fertility in the thoroughbred mare. 2. Early post-partum oestrus (“foal heat”).
Australian veterinary journal    November 1, 1950   Volume 26, Issue 11 295-300 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1950.tb04837.x
MAHAFFEY LW.No abstract available
[Methods in preventing sterility in brood mares in the military stud-farm in Horné Motesicé].
Vojenske zdravotnicke listy    January 1, 1948   Volume 17, Issue 7-8 276-280 
RICHTER L.No abstract available
[Contribution to the knowledge of the breeding of the Arabian horse in the area of the former kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia, with special consideration of the importance of the private stud farms Visnjevci, Vrbik and Innocenchof].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    February 1, 1947   Volume 34, Issue 2 121 
LEHRNER HJ.No abstract available
A study of the first fifty years of Tennessee walking horse breeding.
The Journal of heredity    December 1, 1946   Volume 37, Issue 12 369-373 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a105563
FLETCHER JL.No abstract available
Racing and breeding.
The Journal of the Royal Army Veterinary Corps    August 1, 1946   Volume 17, Issue 4 142-144 
SILVER J.No abstract available
Genotyping in the Brazilian Criollo Horse Stud Book: resources and perspectives.
   March 15, 2026  
The goal of this research was to evaluate the ability of the genotyping information available in the Brazilian Criollo Horse Stud Book to describe the genetic variability of the breed and the exclusion probability determined in comparative tests. Altogether, two softwares were used in the analyses of the available genotypes: Cervus 3.0.3 and Genepop 4.0. Eight microsatellite markers totaled 109 alleles, with an average of 13.6 +/- 0.6 alleles per locus. Large differences between expected and observed heterozygosity were ubiquitous (0.821 +/- 0.07 and 0.470 +/- 0.17, respectively). Although the...
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