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Comparative ingestive mastication in domestic horses and cattle: a pilot investigation
Author(s) -
Janis C. M.,
Constable E. C.,
Houpt K. A.,
Streich W. J.,
Clauss M.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.651
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1439-0396
pISSN - 0931-2439
DOI - 10.1111/j.1439-0396.2010.01030.x
Subject(s) - mastication , ingestion , rumination , dry matter , biology , zoology , grazing , cattle grazing , veterinary medicine , medicine , agronomy , endocrinology , paleontology , cognition , neuroscience
Summary It is often assumed that horses chew food more intensively during ingestion than cattle, which ‐ as ruminants ‐ complete part of the mastication during rumination. This has been proposed as a reason for more robust mandibles, larger masseter insertion areas and larger masseter muscles in horses as compared to cattle and other grazing ruminants. In this study, we evaluate results of comparative feeding trials with three horses (338–629 kg) and three cows (404–786 kg), on four different roughages. Ingestion time (s/g dry matter) and chewing intensity (chews/g dry matter) differed among animals within a species, indicating an influence of body mass, and differed significantly between different forages. However, although numerical differences clearly suggest that horses have longer ingestion times and higher chewing intensities on high‐fibre roughage than do cattle, this could not be proven in this dataset, most likely because of the small number of individuals sampled. Further studies are required to corroborate the suspected ingestive behaviour difference between equids and ruminants.

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