Early signs of excess sand in the equine gut include sluggish behavior, weight loss, diarrhea, and standing in a stretched position.
Equine parvovirus-hepatitis virus is a recently discovered virus and the focus of rapidly evolving research.
Caterpillar management around horse farm paddocks comes down to keeping pregnant mares away from infested trees and either removing or not planting preferred host trees near paddocks.
If you need to make any changes to your horse's spring feeding regime, be sure to make the changes slowly and consult a nutritionist or your veterinarian for advice or guidance.
Recognizing the surprisingly subtle symptoms of early respiratory disease is a focus of upcoming free webinar on March 29th.
According to the AAEP, it is important for a veterinarian to evaluate foals under a month old experiencing diarrhea because they can develop life-threatening dehydration in six to eight hours.
Horses' lungs can harbor disease without anyone noticing until it reaches an advanced state and signs such as coughing and exercise intolerance develop.
With ERU, the horse's immune system inappropriately attacks normal or host proteins in the eye, causing damage that can lead to blindness.
Coronavirus is spread when feces from an infected horse is ingested by another horse and can also be transmitted when horses make oral contact with surfaces contaminated with infected feces.
Horse owners and others are encouraged to sign up for free alert service by The Equine Disease Communication Center for accurate and timely equine disease information.