Dietary experience modifies horses’ feeding behavior and selection patterns of three macronutrient rich diets.
- Clinical Trial
- Journal Article
- Research Support
- Non-U.S. Gov't
Summary
This research studied how horses’ dietary experience influences their selection and feeding behavior on diets rich in different macronutrients: proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates. The results revealed that horses exhibited a preference for protein and carbohydrate-rich diets over the lipid-rich diet, indicating that horses do respond to the macronutrient content in their diets.
Research Methodology
- Seven horses were used in the study. They were kept in stables and under a low-intensity exercise regimen.
- The horses were given haylage alongside three different isocaloric forage-based diets that were rich in one macronutrient – protein, lipid, and hydrolyzable carbohydrates.
- The diets were presented to the horses in a specific sequence: first as a three-way choice for 5 days, then each diet individually for two rounds of three days, and ultimately again as a choice for 5 days.
- During both self-selection phases, their feeding behavior was observed for a single 4-hour period.
- Voluntary intake was measured twice, at 4 hours and 22 hours after the diets were presented.
- They calculated daily macronutrient and energy intakes based on the composition of the trial diets and haylage.
Research Findings
- Horses didn’t show an immediate preference for any diet in the initial 4 hours of the self-selection phase.
- However, after having been exposed to each diet individually, horses favored the protein and carbohydrate-rich diets, signaling a rejection of the lipid-rich diet.
- Notably, the number of visits to the diets decreased during the second self-selection phase, indicating that dietary experience influenced the horses’ foraging behavior.
- Researchers observed that protein and carbohydrate intake increased during the second self-selection phase, whereas lipid intake remained constant across both self-selection phases.
Conclusion
The research reveals that horses can respond to dietary macronutrient content and have preferences in their diet selection, favoring protein and carbohydrate-rich diets over lipid-rich diets. The study suggests that presenting single meals during choice studies can help facilitate the expression of dietary preferences in horses.
Cite This Article
Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- School of Animal, Rural and Environmental Sciences, Nottingham Trent University, Southwell, Nottinghamshire, NG25 0QF, UK.
MeSH Terms
- Animal Feed / analysis
- Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
- Animals
- Choice Behavior / physiology
- Diet / veterinary
- Feeding Behavior / physiology
- Female
- Horses / physiology
- Male