Advances in Equine Nutrition is a compilation of selected papers from past KER nutrition conferences. These papers cover a broad range of topics and contain a wealth of information related to equine nutrition, veterinary medicine, and exercise physiology. Included is a mixture of original research and review material as well as a great deal of practical information about how to feed and manage all types of horses.
1992 - 1997
Topics Include: General Nutrition, The Performance Horse, Feeding Management, Growth and Broodmare Nutrition and Pathological Conditions.
Advances in Equine Nutrition is a compilation of selected papers from past KER nutrition conferences. These papers cover a broad range of topics and contain a wealth of information related to equine nutrition, veterinary medicine and exercise physiology. Included is a mixture of original research and review material as well as a great deal of practical information about how to feed and manage all types of horses. This fully indexed text should prove to be an essential reference for anyone interested in the latest developments in equine nutrition.
Chapters included in this book are: General Nutrition, The Performance Horse, Feeding Management, Growth and Broodmare Nutrition and Pathological Conditions.
The extensive list of contributing authors includes veterinarians and nutritionists from leading veterinary clinics, major universities, and renowned nutrition companies in the US and around the world.
(click on a title to see full text of each article)
1998 - 2000
Topics Include: General Nutrition, Growth and Development, Nutrient Requirements, Pathological Conditions, Feeding Practices and The Performance Horse.
Advances in Equine Nutrition, Volume II features original research and review papers from the 1998, 1999, and 2000 KER Equine Nutrition Conference for Feed Manufacturers. The conference showcases international authorities on nutrition, sports medicine, and veterinary topics pertaining to the horse. These authorities have not only refined nutritional requirements of horses, but they have also discovered ways to most effectively deliver nutrients necessary to fuel horses in all athletic endeavors, to achieve optimal growth in young horses, and to ensure nutrient requirements are being fulfilled in reproductively active horses. Practical feeding and management considerations are interspersed amongst scientific topics. This 545-page book delves deep into the whys and how tos of feeding horses.
(click on a title to see full text of each article)
2001 - 2003
Topics Include:General Nutrition, Growth and Development of the Equine Skeleton, Nutrition and Disease, Nutrition of the Performance Horse.
Advances in Equine Nutrition, Volume III is a collection of original research and review papers from the 2001, 2002, and 2003 KER Equine Nutrition Conference for Feed Manufacturers. The conferences feature international authorities on nutrition, sports medicine, and veterinary topics pertaining to the horse. These authorities have not only refined nutritional requirements of horses, but they have also discovered ways to most effectively deliver nutrients necessary to fuel horses in all athletic endeavors, to achieve optimal growth in young horses, and to ensure nutrient requirements are being fulfilled in reproductively active horses. Interspersed among scientific topics, practical feeding and management considerations are offered.
(click on a title to see full text of each article)
2004 - 2008
Advances in Equine Nutrition, Volume IV is a collection of original research and review papers presented during Kentucky Equine Research nutrition conferences held in Lexington, Kentucky. Conferences feature international authorities on nutrition, exercise physiology, and veterinary topics pertaining to the horse. These authorities have not only refined nutritional requirements of horses, they have also discovered ways to most effectively deliver nutrients necessary to fuel horses in all athletic endeavors, to achieve sound growth in young horses, and to ensure nutrient requirements are being fulfilled in reproductively active horses. Interspersed among scientific topics, practical feeding and management considerations are offered.
(click on a title to see full text of each article)