Analyze Diet

Topic:Weaning

Weaning horses is the process of transitioning a foal from maternal milk to a solid diet, marking an important stage in equine development. This transition involves physical, nutritional, and psychological adjustments for the young horse. Weaning practices can vary widely, including abrupt or gradual separation from the mare, and can influence the foal's growth, behavior, and health. The timing and method may also impact stress levels and social development. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore various weaning strategies, their effects on foal welfare, and the implications for equine management practices.
Study on the energy and protein metabolism in horses.
Archiv fur Tierernahrung    January 1, 1993   Volume 45, Issue 2 173-185 doi: 10.1080/17450399309386098
Burlacu GH, Voicu D, Voicu I, Nicolae M, Petrache E, Georgescu GH, Balan S.The present study focused on energy and protein metabolism in pregnant and lactating mares, including the suckling and weaned growing horses, in order to determine feed availability, as also the energy and protein requirements. The authors found that the feeding diets, consisting of alfalfa hay, oats and compounds, had different availability values in terms of energy and protein, according to animal physiological conditions and age. Thus, the pregnant mares utilized the metabolizable energy (ME) and digestible crude protein (DCP) intake in average proportions of 64.5 +/- 3.2%, 54.6 +/- 3.0%, r...
[Coughing and snivelling of recently weaned foals].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    November 1, 1991   Volume 116, Issue 21 1078 
Binkhorst GJ.No abstract available
The raising of equine colostrum-deprived foals; maintenance and assessment of specific pathogen (EHV-1/4) free status.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 2 111-115 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb02733.x
Chong YC, Duffus WP, Field HJ, Gray DA, Awan AR, O'Brien MA, Lunn DP.Over a period of two years, a total of 22 full term foals from Welsh Mountain pony mares were raised in conditions that were free from infection by Equid herpesvirus (EHV-1/4). Parturition dates were predicted by monitoring colostrum electrolytes, and the mares allowed to foal naturally under supervision or following induction with intravenous oxytocin. Immediately following birth, foals were separated from their dams and transferred to a specially built, positive pressure isolation unit. They were given antibiotic prophylaxis and fed bovine colostrum during the first 24 h, and then mare's mil...
[Several physiologic aspects of the reactions of foals in the first three days after weaning].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 1, 1990   Volume 103, Issue 10 348-351 
Dusek J, Skalický J.Changes have been observed in nine foals, six months of age, after weaning for the time of three days, namely in the intake of drinking water, hematocrit, sedimentation of erythrocytes and three minerals Na+, K+ and Cl-. Foals respond to weaning immediately, lowering significantly their consumption of drinking water and increasing high significance of Na+ and Cl-. Changes of level K+, hematocrit and sedimentation don't show any significant variations. The results reached are to be considered as an introductory information for further inquiry on the more extensive methodical basis.
Experimentally induced cartilaginous fractures (osteochondritis dissecans) in foals fed low-copper diets.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 15, 1988   Volume 193, Issue 2 215-221 
Bridges CH, Harris ED.Four Thoroughbred foals were weaned from their dams when they were 1 day old and were fed a liquid milk-replacer diet containing approximately 1.7 micrograms of copper/g from plastic buckets for 4 to 7 months. They were kept in stalls with fiberglass walls and asphalt floors covered with rubber pads. Serum copper and zinc concentrations were determined 3 times/week by atomic absorption spectrophotometry, and liver copper and zinc concentrations were determined similarly after acid digestion of tissues taken at necropsy. The amount of soluble collagen in articular cartilage and aortic tissue wa...
Serum ferritin, serum iron, and erythrocyte values in foals.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 9 1348-1352 
Harvey JW, Asquith RL, Sussman WA, Kivipelto J.Twenty-one healthy Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse foals were studied from birth until 1 year of age. Foals had access to an iron-supplemented creep feed before weaning and were fed an iron-supplemented concentrate as part of their diet after weaning at 4 months of age. Initial blood samples were taken before foals were allowed to nurse. Serum iron concentration, total iron-binding capacity, and PCV decreased during the foal's first 24 hours of life. Serum iron concentration decreased rapidly from 446 +/- 16 micrograms/dl (mean +/- SE) at birth to 105 +/- 11 micrograms/dl at 3 days of age. Seru...
Serum triiodothyronine and thyroxine concentrations in weanling horses fed carbohydrate by direct gastric infusion.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 4 578-582 
Glade MJ, Luba NK.Plasma glucose and serum insulin, thyroxine, and triiodothyronine concentrations were monitored in 6 weanling Thoroughbreds after direct gastric infusion of solutions containing sucrose or casein. Neither plasma glucose nor serum hormone concentrations were affected by infusions of water or by infusions of 326 or 424 g of casein/250 kg of body weight. However, glucose and hormone concentrations increased significantly (P less than 0.001) after infusions of 649 or 844 g of sucrose/250 kg. Initial rates of increase were more rapid and increases were subsequently reversed more rapidly when 844 g ...
Uterine rupture as a postpartum complication in two mares.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 15, 1985   Volume 187, Issue 12 1377-1379 
Brooks DE, McCoy DJ, Martin GS.Uterine rupture was diagnosed in 2 postpartum mares with hemorrhagic vaginal discharge. Both mares had abdominal pain, as evidenced by pawing, kicking at the abdomen, or attempting to roll. Peritoneal fluid analysis was useful in establishing a diagnosis. One mare had many RBC in the peritoneal fluid and was anemic; this mare was managed medically with oxytocin, antibiotics, and blood transfusion. The mare was able to raise her foal to weaning age. The second mare had many RBC, degenerate neutrophils, and intracellular and extracellular bacteria in peritoneal fluid. Surgical repair of the uter...
Prospective study of progeny of inapparent equine carriers of equine infectious anemia virus.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 5 1114-1116 
Issel CJ, Adams WV, Foil LD.Progeny of a band of horses, positive by the agar-gel immunodiffusion (AGID) test for equine infectious anemia (EIA) antibody, were observed through their weaning over a 4-year period. Sentinels (AGID test-negative) were allowed to mingle with EIA-infected mares and their foals in pasture situations in an area with high populations of potential vectors. Of 27 adult sentinels, 8 (30%) seroconverted in annual rates ranging from 0% to 75%. In contrast, only 2 of 31 (6%) foals weaned became infected. Difference in infection rates between adult sentinels and foals was significant (chi 2, P less tha...
Feeding and drinking behavior of mares and foals with free access to pasture and water.
Journal of animal science    April 1, 1985   Volume 60, Issue 4 883-889 doi: 10.2527/jas1985.604883x
Crowell-Davis SL, Houpt KA, Carnevale J.The feeding and drinking behavior of 11 mares and 15 foals living on pasture with free access to water was recorded during 2,340 15-min focal samples taken over 2 yr. Lactating mares on pasture spent about 70% of the day feeding. Foals began feeding on their first day of life. As they grew older, they spent progressively more time feeding, but still spent only 47 +/- 6% of the time feeding by 21 wk of age. Foals fed primarily during the early morning and evening. While grass formed the major proportion of the diet of both foals and mares, they also ate clay, humus, feces, bark, leaves and twig...
Raising the orphan foal.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1985   Volume 1, Issue 1 169-178 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30775-7
Naylor JM, Bell R.Orphan foals are best reared by fostering them onto a brood mare of appropriate size. If no foster mother is available, they can be reared on 2 per cent fat skimmed cow's milk fortified with dextrose at the rate of 20 gm per L. This should be slowly increased from 10 per cent of body weight at 1 day of age to 25 per cent of body weight at 10 days of age. The amount should then be held constant until weaning. Alternatively, foals can be reared on milk replacers. Manufacturers' feeding instructions rarely mimic the milk intake obtained by a foal nursing her dam, and problems have been observed i...
The effect of artificial rearing on the growth of foals.
Journal of animal science    January 1, 1985   Volume 60, Issue 1 1-5 doi: 10.2527/jas1985.6011
Knight DA, Tyznik WJ.Fourteen Quarter Horse foals were used to evaluate the effects of artificial rearing on growth. Seven foals were removed from their dams at 3 d of age and fed a reconstituted 26% crude protein (CP) milk replacer free choice for 1 mo, at which time ad libitum solid feeding began. Controls were weaned from their dams at 2 mo of age and fed a 21% CP concentrate ad libitum until the end of the trial. Variables measured during the 26-wk trial were live body weight, height at the withers and length of body from point of shoulder to point of hip. No significant differences were found between the two ...
Some nutritional aspects of colic in horses.
Modern veterinary practice    May 1, 1984   Volume 65, Issue 5 A9-A12 
Hintz HF.Consistency of exercise and diet are important in colic prevention. Water should be offered before and after feeding. Fast-growing foals suckling heavily lactating mares may overeat grain at weaning. Creep feeding to accustom the foal to eating grain and gradually increasing the grain intake after weaning are helpful in preventing colic in foals. Stallions may overeat grain when taken off pasture in hot weather. Feeding hay initially and grain later helps avoid colic in these stallions. Type-D Clostridium perfringens may cause enterotoxemia in foals. Corn should be fed in moderation. High-Mg d...
Behaviour of thoroughbred foals during nursing.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 3 257-262 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01785.x
Carson K, Wood-Gush DG.Thoroughbred foals were found to nurse in bouts of nursing activity delimited by intervals of non-nursing activity lasting 27 secs or longer. Nursing activity included nosing, sucking and interval behaviour. During the first week after birth, foals nursed, on average, seven times an hour with a mean bout duration of 147 secs but were not successful at sucking during all nursing bouts. Time spent nursing decreased as the foals grew older until before weaning, at 24 weeks of age, the foals were nursing once an hour with a mean bout duration of 74 secs. The dams hindered their foals' nursing acti...
Learning ability of orphan foals, of normal foals and of their mothers.
Journal of animal science    November 1, 1982   Volume 55, Issue 5 1027-1032 doi: 10.2527/jas1982.5551027x
Houpt KA, Parsons MS, Hintz HF.The maze learning ability of six pony foals that had been weaned at birth was compared to that of six foals reared normally. The foals' learning ability was also compared to their mothers' learning ability at the same task; the correct turn in a single choice point maze. The maze learning test was conducted when the foals were 6 to 8 mo old and after the mothered foals had been weaned. There was no significant difference between the ability of orphaned (weaned at birth) and mothered foals in their ability to learn to turn left (6 +/- .7 and 5.1 +/- .1 trials, respectively) or to learn the reve...
Evaluation of a pregnant mares’ serum and human chorionic gonadotrophin mixture for alleviating summer infertility in sows.
Australian veterinary journal    January 1, 1978   Volume 54, Issue 1 26-29 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1978.tb00266.x
Webster WR.A controlled on-farm trial was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of a commercial gonadotrophin hormone mixture at overcoming a seasonal decrease in fertility in pigs in a sub-tropical environment (summer infertility). The average weaning to oestrus interval of the untreated sows was more than double that of the treated sows and this difference was highly significant. However, fewer of the treated sows farrowed and they produced smaller litters. The improvement in fertility in the treated group achieved by reducing the weaning to oestrus interval was more than cancelled out by an overall ...
[Strongyloides westeri Ihle, 1917 (Nematoda: Strongyloididae). I. Parasitological features of natural infection (author’s transl)].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    September 1, 1977   Volume 102, Issue 17 1039-1043 
Mirck MH.Patent S. westeri infection is particularly common in unweaned foals (61.2 per cent). It is much less common in foals which have been weaned (15.4 per cent). Examination of the faeces of ten artificially reared foals (free from worms) did not supply any evidence of possible prenatal (intra-uterine) helminth infection. In one Shetland pony mare, larvae of S. westeri were found to be present in the milk on the tenth, twenty-fourth and thirty-second day after parturition. Larvae were not detected in the milk of the other mares but all foals showed patent S. westeri infection within from thirteen ...
Plasma cholesterol levels in suckling and weaned calves, lambs, pigs, and colts.
Lipids    November 1, 1973   Volume 8, Issue 11 635-640 doi: 10.1007/BF02533148
Carroll KK, Hamilton RM, Macleod GK.No abstract available
[Horse breeding in Austria].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    April 1, 1966   Volume 53, Issue 4 235-245 
Stelzer F.No abstract available