mhu/hq september 2012: digestive anatomy
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TRANSCRIPT
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My Horse University and eXtension’s HorseQuest welcome you to this live Webcast.
Digestive Anatomy: Why We Feed Horses the
Way We Do
Dr. Carey WilliamsRutgers University
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Meet our presenter:
Dr. Carey WilliamsRutgers University
Danielle Smarsh, Doctoral CandidateRutgers University
Question facilitator:
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FOREGUT:• Mouth• Stomach• Esophagus• Small Intestine
HINDGUT:• Cecum• Large Colon• Small Colon• Rectum
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Mouth
• Function:– Selection– Chewing– Saliva– Swallowing
• Teeth:– Incisors: shear forage– Molars: grind food
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(Hill, 1997. Horse Health Care)
Teeth Floating
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Choke
Endoscopy of an esophageal
obstruction
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Stomach• Small stomach capacity, only 2-4 gallons for a
1100 lb horse– Secretes HCl and Pepsin to begin the breakdown
of food– Unable to regurgitate food • Sphincter between esophagus and stomach only allows
passage of food one way• Horses Can’t Throw Up!
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Small Intestine
• Small intestine is 50-70 ft long and holds 10-23 gallons– Most of the nutrients (protein, some CHO and fat)
are digested here– Most of the vitamins and mineral are absorbed
here– Water is not absorbed here but helps move the
food through
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Accessory Organs
• Pancreas:– Production/secretion of pancreatic juices for
protein, starch, fiber digestion
• Liver:– Production of bile– Emulsification of fat– Bile secreted continuously by the liver– NO GALL BLADDER!
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Large Intestine
• Large Intestine: • Cecum• Large and Small colon• Rectum
– Forage fermentation– Water absorption
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Cecum
• Liquids are passed to the cecum – 3-4 ft long and holds 7-8 gallons– No detoxification of toxic substances until they
reach the cecum– Contains bacteria to
digest the fiber and some carbohydrates
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Cecum
• Functions:– Microbial Fermentation:• Volatile fatty acids: acetic, propionic, butyric• B-Vitamins, Vitamin K, Gas
– Absorption:• Protein and fermentation products
• Transit time:– Slow- 38 to 48 h– Liquids- 5 h
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Microbial Digestion
Microbes
Fiber from forage & other undigested residuals
VFA’s, B-vitamins, Vitamin K, Gas
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Avoid Abrupt Changes
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Large Colon
• Large colon is 10-12 ft. long and holds 14-16 gallons– Four parts: • right ventral colon• sternal flexure to left ventral colon• pelvic flexure to left dorsal colon• diaphragmatic flexure to the right dorsal colon
– Sternal and diaphragmatic flexures are a common place for impaction
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Large Colon
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Small Colon
• Small colon leads up to the rectum– It is 10 ft long and only holds 5 gallons– Smaller diameter than large colon– Functions:• Water absorption• Formation of fecal balls
• Rectum 1 ft in length– Function: Storage reservoir
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NutrientsSite of: Digestion Absorption
Water ------- Colon
Protein Stomach & SI SI
Lipid SI SI
CHO's
Simple SI SI
Complex
Starch SI SI
Structural LI LI
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MonogastricsMouth
Stomach
SI
Cecum
Colon
Prot absorption, lipid dig/absorp,Simple CHO dig/absorp
Complex CHO fermentation
Complex CHO fermentationAbsorption of water
Protein digestion
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Grains and Forages for Horses
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Roughages vs. ConcentratesRoughage Concentrate
Fiber High Low
Energy Low High
Protein Variable Variable
Cost Lower Variable
Density Low (bulky) High
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Roughage
• Pasture and Hay:• Horses should consume AT LEAST 1 % of their
BW per day– 1000 lb horse = 10 lb hay
• Nutrient intake depends on forage quality• Feeding quality forage can reduce cost of
feeding grain
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Pasture
• Grasses:• Cool season: – bluegrass– orchardgrass– timothy– tall fescue
• Warm season:– bermuda– bluestem– sudan
OrchardgrassTimothy
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Pasture
Legumes:• Alfalfa • Clover
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Hay
• Hay:• Grasses and legumes are
cut to make hay• Orchardgrass/Alfalfa• Legumes have higher:
• protein• energy• TDN• COST!
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Hay Quality• Never feed dusty or moldy hay!• Quality depends on:– Plant Maturity• No seed heads
– Leafiness• Smaller stem size
– Smell– Color– Weeds/Debris
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Hay Guidelines
• Hay requirement:– Feed at least 50 % of the total ration as forage
(pasture and/or hay)• E.g. 1000 lb horse will eat 15 to 30 lb of food• If feeding 20 lb; at least 10 lb should be forage
– High quality grass hay or alfalfa/grass mix– Caution with straight Alfalfa• Creates Ca:P ratio imbalance• Diet too high in protein
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Concentrates• Grains:• Fiber - low (2 -10%)• Energy - high• Protein - low (8 to 10%)• Cost - reasonable– Examples
• Corn• Oats• Barley• Sorghum
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- most popular - lower energy value - higher fiber - more palatable and digestible- can be expensive
- palatable - 2 x energy as oats - low in fiber- easy to over feed- moldy is lethal
- small hard kernel - not palatable- used in grain mixes - high energy - low fiber
- mostly for humans- expensive- small hard kernels - high energy- low palatability
- hard hulls- medium fiber & energy
OATS CORN
WHEAT MILO BARLEY
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- byproduct of grain processing is oil- 35 % protein- 85 % is digestible
FLAXSEED
- high-energy ingredient- usually as part of a mixture- kernel has high nutritional value- the plant itself is a good roughage source
RYE
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Feeding Guidelines
• Forage is the base – Always try to feed the most forage possible
• Feed about 2% of the horses BW – 1000 lb horse = 20 lb
• Feeding a 1000 lb horse at maintenance: – If 5-6 lbs grain;– then no less than 15 lbs of hay
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Feeding Guidelines
• Horses should be fed to meet their immediate needs– I.e. cut grain on rest days
• Horses’ stomachs are small so feed at least 2 x a day– More times a day the better
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Feeding Guidelines
• Feed by weight not volume! – 1 lb oats is not 1 lb of corn
• Monitor condition scores – Score of 5 is appropriate
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Feeding Guidelines
• Store feed properly, no mold or rodent contamination
• Feed on a set schedule – Horses are creatures of habit – They easily upset by changes in routine
• Change feeds gradually– Horses stomachs cannot cope with drastic change– It upsets the microbes in the GI tract causing colic
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Feeding Guidelines
• Be aware of the pecking order – Are they getting their food?
• Regularly de-worm – Most common cause of a thin horse
• Regularly examine teeth – Can they chew food?
• Feed off the ground in hay racks or tubs– Prevents dust inhalation
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Carey Williams, Ph.D.
Equine Extension Specialist
www.esc.rutgers.edu
Thank You!
Better horse care through research & education
Equine Science Center
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Give us your feedback!• You will receive a survey by email in 1-2 days.
Please take a few minutes to give us your feedback on this webcast. It will help us to better serve you!
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Upcoming Webcasts
• Protein Requirements for HorsesOctober 23, 2012 | 7PM EDT
• Equine EnergeticsNovember 27, 2012 | 7PM EDT
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Thank you for attending this live web presentation!
For more information about My Horse University please visit us at:
www.myhorseuniversity.com
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