On Dressage Explorer’s Day, sponsored by the Grier School, children also had the opportunity to learn from New Bolton’s Dr. Liz Arbittier, BA, VMD, and her team about what the life of a vet and/or vet tech is like and what it takes to get into the field of equine veterinary medicine.
DaD has recognized the importance of education from the onset and has made education one of its core initiatives, bringing all who attend countless opportunities to learn from the best in the industry year after year.
Horsetalk.co.nz Withholding feed for 10 hours or more has a big effect on gut bacteria in horses, findings suggest
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Withholding feed has a significant effect on the diversity and composition of the faecal bacterial microbiota of horses, particularly after 10 hours, researchers report.
Jaclyn Willette and her fellow researchers said there is an association between equine gastrointestinal disease-causing colic signs and changes in the faecal bacterial microbiota.
The reasons for these changes and their clinical relevance has not been investigated, they noted.
The researchers, with the New Bolton Center at the University of Pennsylvania, said withholding feed, which is an integral part of managing horses with colic, may contribute to the observed changes in the microbiota. This, in turn, could affect the interpretation of findings in horses with colic.