Analyze Diet
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience2008; 2(10); 1526-1533; doi: 10.1017/S1751731108002760

Voluntary intake and digestibility in horses: effect of forage quality with emphasis on individual variability.

Abstract: Food intake is a key biological process in animals, as it determines the energy and nutrients available for the physiological and behavioural processes. In herbivores, the abundance, structure and quality of plant resources are known to influence intake strongly. In ruminants, as the forage quality declines, digestibility and total intake decline. Equids are believed to be adapted to consume high-fibre low-quality forages. As hindgut fermenters, it has been suggested that their response to a reduction in food quality is to increase intake to maintain rates of energy and nutrient absorption. All reviews of horse nutrition show that digestibility declines with forage quality; for intake, however, most studies have found no significant relationship with forage quality, and it has even been suggested that horses may eat less with declining forage quality similarly to ruminants. A weakness of these reviews is to combine data from different studies in meta-analyses without allowing the differences between animals and diets to be controlled for. In this study, we analysed a set of 45 trials where intake and digestibility were measured in 21 saddle horses. The dataset was analysed both at the group (to allow comparisons with the literature) and at the individual levels (to control for individual variability). As expected, dry matter digestibility declined with forage quality in both analyses. Intake declined slightly with increasing fibre contents at the group level, and there were no effects of crude protein or dry matter digestibility on intake. Overall, the analysis for individual horses showed a different pattern: intake increased as digestibility and crude protein declined, and increased with increasing fibre. Our analysis at the group level confirms previous reviews and shows that forage quality explains little of the variance in food intake in horses. For the first time, using mixed models, we show that the variable 'individual' clarifies the picture, as the horses showed different responses to a decrease in forage quality: some compensated for the low nutritional value of the forages by increasing intake, few others responded by decreasing intake with declining forage quality, but not enough to cause any deficit in their energy and protein supplies. On the whole, all the animals managed to meet their maintenance requirements. The individual variability may be a by-product of artificial selection for performance in competition in saddle horses.
Publication Date: 2008-10-01 PubMed ID: 22443911DOI: 10.1017/S1751731108002760Google Scholar: Lookup
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  • Journal Article

Summary

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This research study investigates the influence of forage quality on the voluntary intake and food digestion efficiency in horses, highlighting significant individual variations in their response to declining forage quality.

Overview of the Research

  • In this study, the researchers scrutinize how the quality of forage, or plant material consumed by grazing or browsing, affects the voluntary intake and digestibility in horses. The investigation is important because food intake determines the energy and nutrients available for the physiological and behavioral processes in animals. For herbivores, including horses, the quality of their food sources significantly impacts their intake and digestion.

Methodology and Analysis

  • The study involved the analysis of 45 trials using 21 saddle horses, where intake and digestibility were measured. These trials were examined at both group and individual levels to control for differences between animals and diets.
  • The researchers observed that as the forage quality declined, so did the dry matter digestibility — a consistent finding in both group and individual analyses. The intake, however, marginally decreased with increasing fibre contents at the group level with no significant effects of crude protein or dry matter digestibility on intake.

Findings of the Research

  • Contrary to the group level data, on an individual level, the intake increased as digestibility and crude protein declined, and increased with increasing fibre. The mixed result on the group level validates previous research where forage quality was determined to explain little variance in food intake in horses.
  • For the first time, the researchers were able to demonstrate that individual horses showed diverse responses to a decrease in forage quality: some compensated for the low nutritional value by increasing their intake, while others decreased intake but not enough to cause any deficit in their energy and protein supplies.

Conclusion and Implications

  • The research concludes that individual horses manage their diet intake based on the quality of forage available to meet their maintenance requirements. This indicates that artificial selection for performance in competition in saddle horses may contribute to this individual variability.
  • Better knowledge of individual horse’s responses could have implications for horse feeding management, enabling greater optimization of their performance and health.

Cite This Article

APA
Edouard N, Fleurance G, Martin-Rosset W, Duncan P, Dulphy JP, Grange S, Baumont R, Dubroeucq H, Pérez-Barbería FJ, Gordon IJ. (2008). Voluntary intake and digestibility in horses: effect of forage quality with emphasis on individual variability. Animal, 2(10), 1526-1533. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1751731108002760

Publication

ISSN: 1751-7311
NlmUniqueID: 101303270
Country: England
Language: English
Volume: 2
Issue: 10
Pages: 1526-1533

Researcher Affiliations

Edouard, N
  • 1Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, UR 1213 Unité de Recherches sur les Herbivores, 63122 Saint-Genès-Champanelle, France.
Fleurance, G
    Martin-Rosset, W
      Duncan, P
        Dulphy, J P
          Grange, S
            Baumont, R
              Dubroeucq, H
                Pérez-Barbería, F J
                  Gordon, I J

                    Citations

                    This article has been cited 8 times.
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