34 results on '"Robison, Cara I."'
Search Results
2. Influence of keel impacts and laying hen behavior on keel bone damage
- Author
-
Baker, Sydney L., Robison, Cara I., Karcher, Darrin M., Toscano, Michael J., and Makagon, Maja M.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. n-3 essential fatty acid and vitamin D supplementation improve skeletal health in laying hens
- Author
-
Abraham, Meagan E., Robison, Cara I., Kim, Woo K., Regmi, Prafulla, and Karcher, Darrin M.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Tracking the Impact of Weather on Equine Activity While Pastured
- Author
-
Keller, Gretel A., Nielsen, Brian D., Vergara-Hernandez, Fernando B., and Robison, Cara I.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Evaluation of Within- and Between- Session Reliability of the TekscanTM Hoof System With a Glue-on Shoe
- Author
-
Logan, Alyssa A., Nielsen, Brian D., Hallock, David B., Robison, Cara I., and Popovich, John M., Jr
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Comparison of Bone Mineral Content of the Equine Third Metacarpal to Total Radiographic Bone Aluminum Equivalents From Unprocessed Digital Radiographs
- Author
-
Emmert, Brittney J., Robison, Cara I., Pritchard, Abby, and Nielsen, Brian D.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Determination of Phosphorus and Nitrogen Environmental Load From Six Different Bedding Types Used in an Equine Facility
- Author
-
Woodward, Adrienne D., Nielsen, Brian D., Pritchard, Abby, and O'Connor-Robison, Cara I.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Cage-Free Pullets Minimally Affected by Stocking Density Stressors.
- Author
-
Abraham, Meagan E., Robison, Cara I., Serpa, Priscila B. S., Strandberg, Natalia J., Erasmus, Marisa A., Fraley, Gregory S., Erf, Gisela F., and Karcher, Darrin M.
- Subjects
- *
FEATHERS , *DENSITY , *HENS , *BLOCK designs , *BODY weight , *FISH stocking - Abstract
Simple Summary: Simple Summary: The first 16 weeks of life for a laying hen is the pullet phase. Experiences and management during this phase are critical for the long-term success of a hen, but few studies have evaluated pullet management in cage-free systems. This study evaluated the effects of two density or space allotments and two pullet strains in cage-free systems. Bird condition, physiology, immunology, and production parameters were evaluated. Stocking density only affected the size of one immune organ, the bursa of Fabricius. The relative bursal weight was higher in the low-density group. The feed conversion rate was improved in the low-density group for both strains. The brown strain had decreased uniformity and worse tail and total feather coverage at the high-stocking density. The white strain had improved uniformity and worse tail and total feather coverage at the low-stocking density. The majority of parameters evaluated had strain and age main and/or interaction effects only. Ultimately, cage-free pullets had limited negative effects at the high and low-stocking densities used. Management choices during the pullet phase can affect behavior, welfare, and health later in life, but few studies have evaluated the pullet phase, particularly in extensive housing systems. This study was a 2 × 2 factorial randomized complete block design (RCBD) with two strains and two stocking densities. The Lohmann LB-Lite and Lohmann LSL-Lite were housed on the floor at high-stocking density (619–670 cm2/bird) and low-stocking density (1249–1352 cm2/bird), which changed with age from 2 to 16 weeks of age (WOA). Bird-based measures of appearance, blood parameters, organ measurements, and production values were evaluated. Stocking density alone affected (p < 0.05) only relative bursal weight (% of body weight)—3.32% in the low-density versus 3.08% in the high-density group. High-stocking density was correlated with decreased uniformity (high—89.33 ± 0.24%; low—90.41 ± 0.24; p < 0.02) and worse feather coverage in the brown strain. High-stocking density was correlated with greater uniformity (High—90.39 ± 0.24%; Low—88.47 ± 0.24%; p < 0.001) and better feather coverage in the white strain. This study's feed conversion ratio (FCR) was improved by 0.07 in the low-stocking density for both strains. The remaining parameters were affected by strain and age only. Thus, while stocking density effects vary slightly depending on the strain used, cage-free pullets had limited negative effects at both the high and low-stocking densities tested in this study; there were few to no changes in the numerous bird-based welfare parameters tested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Clodronate disodium does not produce measurable effects on bone metabolism in an exercising, juvenile, large animal model.
- Author
-
Vergara-Hernandez, Fernando B., Nielsen, Brian D., Popovich Jr., John M., Panek, Char L., Logan, Alyssa A., Robison, Cara I., Ehrhardt, Richard A., Johnson, Tyler N., Chargo, Nicholas J., Welsh Jr., Thomas H., Bradbery, Amanda N., Leatherwood, Jessica L., and Colbath, Aimee C.
- Subjects
BONE metabolism ,BONE density ,TREADMILL exercise ,BONE remodeling ,BONE growth ,BONE resorption ,OSSEOINTEGRATION ,HEALING - Abstract
Bisphosphonates are commonly used to treat and prevent bone loss, but their effects in active, juvenile populations are unknown. This study examined the effects of intramuscular clodronate disodium (CLO) on bone turnover, serum bone biomarkers (SBB), bone mineral density (BMD), bone microstructure, biomechanical testing (BT), and cartilage glycosaminoglycan content (GAG) over 165 days. Forty juvenile sheep (253 ± 6 days of age) were divided into four groups: Control (saline), T
0 (0.6 mg/kg CLO on day 0), T84 (0.6 mg/kg CLO on day 84), and T0+84 (0.6 mg/kg CLO on days 0 and 84). Sheep were exercised 4 days/week and underwent physical and lameness examinations every 14 days. Blood samples were collected for SBB every 28 days. Microstructure and BMD were calculated from tuber coxae (TC) biopsies (days 84 and 165) and bone healing was assessed by examining the prior biopsy site. BT and GAG were evaluated postmortem. Data, except lameness data, were analyzed using a mixed-effects model; lameness data were analyzed as ordinal data using a cumulative logistic model. CLO did not have any measurable effects on the skeleton of sheep. SBB showed changes over time (p ≤ 0.03), with increases in bone formation and decreases in some bone resorption markers. TC biopsies showed increasing bone volume fraction, trabecular spacing and thickness, and reduced trabecular number on day 165 versus day 84 (p ≤ 0.04). These changes may be attributed to exercise or growth. The absence of a treatment effect may be explained by the lower CLO dose used in large animals compared to humans. Further research is needed to examine whether low doses of bisphosphonates may be used in active juvenile populations for analgesia without evidence of bone changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Clodronate disodium is neither cytotoxic nor cytoprotective to normal and recombinant equine interleukin‐1β‐treated joint tissues in vitro.
- Author
-
Vergara‐Hernandez, Fernando B., Panek, Char L., Nielsen, Brian D., Robison, Cara I., and Colbath, Aimee C.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Sprint Exercise of Juvenile Animals Does Not Impact Cartilage Glycosaminoglycan or Synovial Fluid Neopeptide Collagenase Cleavage of Type I and II Collagen Content
- Author
-
Logan, Alyssa A., Nielsen, Brian D., Manfredi, Jane M., and Robison, Cara I.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Comparison of Nutrient Digestibility Between Adult and Aged Horses
- Author
-
Elzinga, Sarah, Nielsen, Brian D., Schott, Harold C., II, Rapson, Julie, Robison, Cara I., McCutcheon, Jill, Harris, Patricia A., and Geor, Ray
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Impact of Circular Exercise Diameter on Bone and Joint Health of Juvenile Animals.
- Author
-
Logan, Alyssa A., Nielsen, Brian D., Hiney, Kristina M., Robison, Cara I., Manfredi, Jane M., Buskirk, Daniel D., and Popovich Jr., John M.
- Subjects
JOINTS (Anatomy) ,BONE health ,ANIMAL young ,TREADMILL exercise ,ANIMAL health ,PHALANGES - Abstract
Simple Summary: In many equestrian disciplines, circular exercise is utilized to train, exercise, and compete with horses and can vary in gait, as well as diameter. This study aimed to determine if circular exercise diameter impacts animal health. Calves have previously been used as a terminal skeletal model of juvenile horses, allowing for the collection of musculoskeletal samples that are not acceptable from horses. Calves exercised on a small circle (12-m clockwise), large circle (18-m clockwise), treadmill, or served as non-exercised controls. Exercise was performed at a walking speed, starting at 5 min per day and increasing 5 min weekly until reaching 30 min per day during the 7-week study. The response to exercise was monitored in the forelimb bones and joints. The small circular exercise group was found to have bone diameters that differed between the right and left fused third and fourth metacarpi, and between lateral and medial proximal phalanx bones. Cartilage glycosaminoglycan content was greater in the outside leg of the small circle exercise calves than the inside leg, with no differences noted within other treatments. These differences suggest that altering circular exercise diameter can impact bone and joint health, and that larger diameter circles may prevent asymmetric loading between inside and outside legs. Circular exercise is used in many equestrian disciplines and this study aimed to determine if circle diameter impacts juvenile animal forelimb bone and joint health. On day 0, 24 calves at 9 weeks of age were assigned the following exercise treatments: small circle (12 m clockwise), large circle (18-m clockwise), treadmill, or non-exercised control. Exercise was initiated at 1.1–1.5 m/s for 5 min/d and increased 5 min weekly until reaching 30 min/d. On day 49, synovial fluid was collected from multiple joints, cartilage was collected from the proximal surface of fused third and fourth metacarpi (MC III and IV), and forelimbs underwent computed tomography scans. A statistical analysis (PROC mixed) was performed in SAS 9.4. The inside leg of the small circle treatment had a larger MC III and IV dorsopalmar external diameter than the outside (p = 0.05). The medial proximal phalanx had a greater mediolateral diameter than the lateral proximal phalanx of the small circle treatment (p = 0.01). Fetlock nitric oxide was greater in the large circle and treadmill treatments (p < 0.0001). Cartilage glycosaminoglycan concentration was greater in the outside leg of the small circle exercise treatment than the inside leg (p = 0.03). Even at slow speeds, circular exercise diameter can impact joint and bone health, but faster speeds may have greater alterations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Behavior and Immune Response of Conventional and Slow-Growing Broilers to Salmonella Typhimurium.
- Author
-
Snyder, Ashlyn M., Riley, Sean P., Robison, Cara I., Karcher, Darrin M., Wickware, Carmen L., Johnson, Timothy A., and Weimer, Shawna L.
- Subjects
SALMONELLA typhimurium ,IMMUNE response ,BROILER chickens ,VIDEO recording - Abstract
Fast growth rate in broiler chickens comes with welfare concerns and the contribution of growth rate to pathogen resistance and sickness behavior is relatively unknown. The objective of this study was to evaluate physiological and behavioral responses of conventional (CONV) and slow-growing (SG) male broilers challenged with Salmonella Typhimurium. CONV (n = 156) and SG (n = 156) chicks were raised in a pen with wood litter shavings until day 7 of age, when birds were transferred to 24 isolators (n = 11 chicks/isolator). On day 14 of age, half of the birds (n = 12 isolators) were challenged with S. Typhimurium (ST) and the other half (n = 12 isolators) received a control (C). On days 7, 13, 17, 21, and 24, body weight was recorded, and blood, jejunum and ileum sections were collected from 2 birds/isolator (n = 48 birds/sampling) to measure plasma IgA and IgG and intestinal histomorphology, respectively. On days 12, 16, 21, and 23, video was recorded to evaluate bird postures (sitting, standing, or locomoting) and behaviors (eating, drinking, preening, stretching, sham foraging, allopreening, and aggression). CONV birds were 70 g heavier (p = 0.03) on day 21 and 140 g heavier (p = 0.007) on day 24 than SG. On day 7, CONV jejunum villus height and crypt depth were 22 and 7 μm greater (p ≤ 0.001), respectively, than SG. On day 24, ST ileum villus height was 95 μm shorter (p = 0.009) than C. IgA increased after day 17 for all birds and at day 21, CONV IgA was greater (p = 0.01) than SG. Although SG IgG was 344 μg/ml greater (p = 0.05) than CONV on day 7, CONV IgG increased with age (p < 0.0001) to greater (p ≤ 0.03) concentrations than SG on day 21 and day 24 by 689 μg/ml and 1,474 μg/ml, respectively, while SG IgG remained at similar concentrations after day 13. Generally, a greater proportion of birds sham foraged as they aged (p < 0.0001). A greater proportion of CONV tended to sit (p = 0.09) and fewer locomoted (p < 0.0001) than SG as they aged. The results illustrate conventional and slow-growing broilers differ in their behavior, immunity, and response to Salmonella. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A Marine Mineral Supplement Alters Markers of Bone Metabolism in Yearling Arabians
- Author
-
Nielsen, Brian D., Cate, Ryan E., and OʼConnor-Robison, Cara I.
- Published
- 2010
16. Glycemic and Insulinemic Responses Are Affected by Age of Horse and Method of Feed Processing
- Author
-
Nielsen, Brian D., OʼConnor-Robison, Cara I., Spooner, Holly S., and Shelton, Jason
- Published
- 2010
17. Average stride length and stride rate of Thoroughbreds and Quarter Horses during racing.
- Author
-
Vergara-Hernandez, Fernando B, Nielsen, Brian D, Robison, Cara I, Fabus, Taylor A, Kompare, Jasmin L, Lazić, Rebecca Ashley LeCompte, and Colbath, Aimee C
- Subjects
THOROUGHBRED horse ,HORSE racing ,RACE horses - Abstract
The main factors influencing speed in athletes are stride length (SL) and stride rate (SR). However, conflict remains whether SL or SR is the key determinant of higher speeds. Quarter Horses (QH) generally reach higher speeds in their races than do Thoroughbreds (TB). However, the influence of SL and SR on this greater speed is unclear. Therefore, the main objective of this study was to compare SL and SR in QH and TB raced in short (sprint) and long (classic) distances. We hypothesized that QH have a higher SR in comparison to TB, and SR decreases as distance increases. Two race distances were analyzed for each breed: QH races of 100.6 and 402.3 m, and TB races of 1,207.0 and 2,011.7 m. Data from 20 horses were obtained, consisting of five horses from each race distance (10 QH and 10 TB). Five individuals watched recordings of each race three times counting the number of strides taken by each winning horse. The SR was calculated using the average number of strides over a given race duration, and SL was determined by calculating the total number of strides over the distance covered. Speed was calculated by dividing the distance by the time of the winning horse. The PROC Mixed Procedure was used to identify statistical differences between breeds, and between distances within the same breed. Results showed that although the SL of the TB was longer in comparison with the QH (P < 0.001), the average SR in QH was higher than in TB (2.88 vs. 2.34 + 0.03 strides/s; P < 0.001). Furthermore, QH classic distance demonstrated a faster speed than TB at either distance (P < 0.001). In conclusion, QH achieve a higher SR in comparison to TB (between 14% and 20% more than TB), confirming the importance of SR in achieving high racing speeds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Calves, as a model for juvenile horses, need only one sprint per week to experience increased bone strength.
- Author
-
Logan, Alyssa A, Nielsen, Brian D, Robison, Cara I, Manfredi, Jane M, Buskirk, Daniel D, Schott, Harold C, and Hiney, Kristina M
- Subjects
CALVES ,SPRINTING ,BEEF cattle ,DAIRY cattle ,BONE growth ,HORSES ,ANIMAL young - Abstract
Previous research has determined that maintaining young animals in stalls is detrimental to their bone health, while the addition of 50 to 82-m sprints 5 d/week aids in counteracting the reduction of bone strength from confinement. The current research aims to determine if 1 or 3 d/week of sprinting affords the same benefits to bone as 5 d/week of sprinting compared to animals confined with no sprinting. Twenty-four Holstein bull calves were obtained from the Michigan State University Dairy Cattle Teaching and Research Center. At 9 wk of age, calves were randomly assigned to treatments of 1, 3, or 5 d/week of sprint exercise, or to the confined control group sprinted 0 d/week. Each treatment had 6 calves. Individual sprinting bouts included a single sprint down a 71-m concrete aisle. For the duration of the 6-wk study, calves were housed at the MSU Beef Cattle Teaching and Research Center in stalls which afforded calves room to stand, lay down, and turn around. Serum was collected weekly via jugular venipuncture to obtain concentrations of osteocalcin (OC) and C-telopeptide crosslaps of type I collagen (CTX-1)—markers of bone formation and degradation, respectively. Sprints were videotaped weekly to determine stride frequency and sprint velocity. On day 42, calves were humanely euthanized at the Michigan State University Meat Lab and both front limbs were immediately harvested. Computed tomography scans and mechanical testing were performed on the left fused third and fourth metacarpal bones. Serum OC concentration was greatest for calves sprinted 5 d/week (P < 0.001). Calves sprinted 5 d/week had both greater stride frequency (P < 0.05) and lower sprint velocity (P < 0.05). All exercise treatments experienced greater dorsal cortical widths compared to control animals (P < 0.01). Through mechanical testing, fracture forces of all sprinting treatments were determined to be greater than the control treatment (P < 0.02). Results from this study support that sprinting 1, 3, or 5 d/week during growth can increase bone health and cause favorable alterations in bone markers. While all exercise treatments had over a 20% increase to fracture force, calves sprinted 1 d/week sprinted only 426 m over the 6-wk study and still experienced over a 20% increase in bone strength compared to confined calves. This study demonstrates the remarkably few strides at speed needed to enhance bone strength and emphasizes the danger to skeletal strength if sprinting opportunities are not afforded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Keel bone damage assessment: consistency in enriched colony laying hens.
- Author
-
Chargo, Nicholas J, Robison, Cara I, Baker, Sydney L, Toscano, Michael J, Makagon, Maja M, and Karcher, Darrin M
- Subjects
- *
PALPATION , *COMPUTED tomography , *BONE fractures , *HENS , *ANIMAL morphology - Abstract
Damage to the keel bone is a major issue in the laying hen industry. The goal of this study was to compare palpation results of live laying hens to digital computed tomography (CT) images, to assess changes in palpation reliability as training and familiarity increased, and to examine keel bone morphology over time. The longitudinal study consisted of 2 trials of 3 observation periods using 40 different (n = 120) W-36 hens housed in enriched colony cages. The first trial began when hens were 52 to 58 wk of age repeating the trial when the same birds were 74 to 81 wk of age. At 52 wk of age, each hen's keel bone was palpated by a single individual for keel bone caudal tip fractures (Tip), sagittal deviations (Evenness), and transverse deviations (Straightness). After palpation, each hen was placed in a motion limiting restraint and scanned using CT. The hens spent the next 21 d in their cages and on day 21, the hens were collected, palpated, and CT scanned again. The CT scans were imported into Mimics analysis software, 3D models of each keel bone were constructed and evaluated. Each bone and 3D model was scored (0, 1, 2) on the measurement of transverse deviation based on <0.5 cm, 0.51 to 1.0 cm, and >1.0 cm total deviation, respectively. Analysis of data using Proc Freq and Means in SAS 9.3 revealed minimal to moderate kappa values and moderate agreement percentages between palpators and digital analysis. The computer generated 3D models of individual keel bones were compared to palpation scores for Tip, Evenness, and Straightness at the beginning and end of each trial. The visual observations of the 3D models were qualitative, performed by a single individual. Overall, we found CT scanning to be a useful tool in observing changes to the keel bone, we observed changes in palpation accuracy as training/familiarity increased, and examined changes in keel morphology, specifically in the tip, after 52 wk of age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Keel bone differences in laying hens housed in enriched colony cages.
- Author
-
Chargo, Nicholas J, Robison, Cara I, Akaeze, Hope O, Baker, Sydney L, Toscano, Michael J, Makagon, Maja M, and Karcher, Darrin M
- Subjects
- *
HENS , *COMPUTED tomography , *ACCELEROMETERS , *ANIMAL morphology , *POULTRY products - Abstract
Keel bone damage may be painful to birds and affect their production. In order to better understand the frequency, position, and timepoint of keel bone damage that occur during production, the integrity of W-36 laying hen keel bones housed in enriched colony cages at 748.4 cm2 (116 in2) was evaluated. At four time points, 120 birds (10 per cage; three cages per each of four rooms) had keel bones evaluated. Each hen was placed in a motion limiting restraint, scanned using computed tomography (CT), fitted in vests containing tri-axial accelerometers, and placed back in their cages for 21 d. After 21 d, the hens were rescanned and returned to their cages. This process was repeated after 133 d. The CT scans were imported into Mimics analysis software (Materialise, Plymouth, MI, USA); 3D models were made of each keel bone at each time point and exported to 3-matic analysis software (Materialise, Plymouth, MI, USA). Each laying hen's keel bone model was superimposed onto scans from multiple time points resulting in four bone pairings representative of each 21-d period, the 133-d period, and the entire duration of the project. Next, the proximal portion of each bone pairing was edited to normalize bone shape according to a strict protocol. Additionally, each pairing was divided into three portions: distal aspect (3 cm), proximal aspect (2 cm), and middle portion (remaining). Whole bone pairing and each bone portion was analyzed using the Part Comparison tool in 3-matic. Raw data were compiled into three datasets and analyzed in SAS 9.3 using the GLIMMIX procedure using a three-level random intercept model. The model controlled for time, part, part(time), and system with random intercepts of bird(cage) and cage. Overall, results revealed that the greatest morphological changes occurred during the first 21-d period with regards to time (P = 0.03) and in the distal aspect of the keel with regards to part (P < 0.0001). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Influence of various concentrate‐to‐roughage ratios on dietary intake and nutrient digestibilities of weanling horses.
- Author
-
Turcott‐White, Susan K., Nielsen, Brian D., Robison, Cara I., Skelly, Christine D., Rosenstein, Diane S., Pritchard, Abby, and Herdt, Thomas
- Subjects
NUTRITIONAL value of feeds ,HORSE feeding & feeds ,ANIMAL nutrition ,PROTEINS ,BODY weight - Abstract
The objective of this study was to compare the feed intake and the apparent digestibilities of three different diets varying in concentrate‐to‐roughage ratios in weanling horses (n = 24) at 5 and 8 months of age. Horses were stratified by breed, gender, birth date and body weight and assigned to one of three dietary treatments containing the following concentrate‐to‐roughage ratios on an as‐fed basis: 70:30 (High Con), 50:50 (Equal) and 30:70 (Low Con). All horses were fed their respective diets for a 10‐day adaptation period and a 4‐day collection period at 5 and 8 months. There were no differences in BW or daily feed intake among treatments during both trials. The horses consuming Low Con had a greater amount of faecal output than High Con at both 5 and 8 months (p < 0.01). At 5 months, High Con had the highest crude protein (CP) digestibility (p < 0.05). At 8 months, High Con had a higher CP digestibility than Low Con (p < 0.01) and tended to be higher than Equal (p = 0.07). Acid detergent fibre (ADF) digestibility did not differ among treatments; however, horses fed the Low Con tended to digest a higher percentage of neutral detergent fibre (NDF) than both the Equal and High Con treatments (p = 0.09). Horses in the High Con treatment tended to digest a higher percentage of energy than those in the Low Con treatment (p = 0.06). Weanlings seem to digest protein more thoroughly when fed high‐concentrate diets and may digest fibre more efficiently when fed diets higher in fibre. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Duck gait: Relationship to hip angle, bone ash, bone density, and morphology.
- Author
-
Robison, Cara I., Rice, Meredith, Makagon, Maja M., and Karcher, Darrin M.
- Subjects
- *
POULTRY growth , *DUCKS , *BONE ash , *BONE density , *COMPUTED tomography ,POULTRY anatomy - Abstract
The rapid growth meat birds, including ducks, undergo requires skeletal integrity; however, fast growth may not be conducive to adequate bone structure. A relationship likely exists between skeletal changes and duck mobility. Reduced mobility in meat ducks may have impacts on welfare and production. This study examined the relationships among gait score, bone parameters, and hip angle. Commercial Pekin ducks, ages 14 d (n = 100), 21 d (n = 100), and 32 d (n = 100) were weighed and gait scored with a 3-point gait score system by an observer as they walked over a Tekscan gait analysis system. Gait was scored as GS0, GS1, or GS2 with a score of GS0 defined as good walking ability and a score of GS2 as poorest walking ability. Ducks were humanely euthanized, full body scanned using quantitative computed tomography (QCT), and the right femur and tibia were extracted. Leg bones were cleaned, measured, fat extracted, and ashed. QCT scans were rendered to create computerized 3D models where pelvic hip angles and bone density were measured. Statistical analysis was conducted using PROC MIXED with age and gait score in the model. Body weight increased with age, but within an age, body weight decreased as walking ability became worse (P < 0.01). As expected, linear increases in tibia and femur bone width and length were observed as the ducks aged (P < 0.01). Right and left hip angle increased with duck age (P < 0.01). Additionally, ducks with a GS2 had wider hip angles opposed to ducks with a GS0 (P < 0.01). Bone density increased linearly with both age and gait score (P < 0.05). Femur ash content was lowest in 32-day-old ducks and ducks with GS1 and GS2 (P < 0.0001). Tibia ash content increased with age, but decreased as gait score increased (P < 0.001). The observation that right hip angle changed with gait scores merits further investigation into the relationship between duck mobility and skeletal changes during growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Impact of Gait and Diameter during Circular Exercise on Front Hoof Area, Vertical Force, and Pressure in Mature Horses.
- Author
-
Logan, Alyssa A., Nielsen, Brian D., Robison, Cara I., Hallock, David B., Manfredi, Jane M., Hiney, Kristina M., Buskirk, Daniel D., and Popovich Jr., John M.
- Subjects
GAIT in animals ,HORSE health ,HORSES ,HOOFS ,HORSE owners ,HORSE paces, gaits, etc. ,TREADMILLS - Abstract
Simple Summary: Circular exercise is used frequently to exercise, train, and evaluate horses both under saddle and with lunging. However, little is known of the impacts this type of repetitive exercise has on the front limbs of horses. Nine mature horses wore Tekscan
TM Hoof Sensors on their front hooves to determine if changing the circle size and gait at which the horse is traveling impacts the area, vertical force, or pressure output. Sensor data were collected while horses travelled in a straight line at the walk and trot and in small and large counterclockwise circles at the walk, trot, and canter. Gait was found to be a driving factor for differences in outputs, with mean area, mean vertical force, and mean pressure being greater at the walk in a straight line, and the area being greater at the canter when circling. When traveling in a counterclockwise circle, the mean area of the outside front leg was highest at the canter. This study shows gait is an important factor when evaluating exercise in a circle or straight line. Horse owners may choose to perform circular exercise at slower gaits or minimize unnecessary circular exercise to decrease differences between limbs and potentially reduce injury. Circular exercise can be used at varying gaits and diameters to exercise horses, with repeated use anecdotally relating to increased lameness. This work sought to characterize mean area, mean vertical force, and mean pressure of the front hooves while exercising in a straight line at the walk and trot, and small (10-m diameter) and large circles (15-m diameter) at the walk, trot, and canter. Nine mature horses wore TekscanTM Hoof Sensors on their forelimbs adhered with a glue-on shoe. Statistical analysis was performed in SAS 9.4 with fixed effects of leg, gait, and exercise type (PROC GLIMMIX) and p < 0.05 as significant. For all exercise types, the walk had greater mean pressure than the trot (p < 0.01). At the walk, the straight line had greater mean area loaded than the large circle (p = 0.01), and both circle sizes had lower mean vertical force than the straight line (p = 0.003). During circular exercise at the canter, the outside front limb had greater mean area loaded than at the walk and trot (p = 0.001). This study found that gait is an important factor when evaluating circular exercise and should be considered when exercising horses to prevent injury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Keel impacts and associated behaviors in laying hens.
- Author
-
Baker, Sydney L., Robison, Cara I., Karcher, Darrin M., Toscano, Michael J., and Makagon, Maja M.
- Subjects
- *
HENS , *BIRD behavior , *BONE mechanics , *BONE fractures , *BONE growth - Abstract
• The structures of acceleration events experienced at the keel were described. • Acceleration events occurred mainly when hens collided with their environment. • Collisions typically occurred when hens attempted to ascend onto a perch. Factors contributing to the development of keel bone damage are not well understood. This study aimed to identify behaviors and cage structures associated with acceleration events experienced by individual hens at their keels as the birds navigated their enriched colony cage environments. Additionally, we aimed to characterize the accelerations associated with these behaviors, as we postulated that behaviors associated with higher accelerations may be more likely to lead to keel bone damage. Sixty five 19 week old Hyline W36 hens were placed in each of 12 enriched colony cages. Ten focal hens per cage were selected for observation. Each hen was fitted with a jacket which contained a tri-axial accelerometer with an external sensor that was fitted into a small pocked over the hen's keel. The logger recorded any time that the hen sustained an acceleration event at the keel (>12 G-units). Logger output was matched with video data, allowing us to describe the behavior of the affected bird at the time of the acceleration event recorded at the keel. Data on each bird were collected continuously over two 3-week periods, when the hens were between 52–60 and 74–83 weeks of age. Collisions accounted for nearly 81% of observed acceleration events with acceleration peaks of at least 20 G-units. The majority of collisions were with the perch and were sustained mainly as the hen attempted to ascend onto it. It has previously been reported that the prevalence of keel bone fractures is higher among hens housed in cages that do versus do not contain perches. This study lends support to the growing body of evidence indicating that interactions with perch contribute to the keel bone damage sustained by laying hens housed in enriched colony cage systems, however, the relationship between acceleration events and occurrence of keel bone damage has yet to be directly assessed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Exercising sheep as a preclinical model for musculoskeletal research.
- Author
-
Vergara-Hernandez, Fernando B., Nielsen, Brian D., Panek, Char L., Robison, Cara I., and Colbath, Aimee C.
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL models in research , *SHEEP , *ACID phosphatase , *BONE resorption , *ALKALINE phosphatase , *TREADMILL exercise - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To establish an orthopedic, preclinical, ovine model of controlled exercise using an equine walker. ANIMALS 20 Dorset-Polypay sheep. PROCEDURES Sheep underwent 11 weeks of exercise, 4 days per week. Exercise duration and intensity increased until sheep performed 25 minutes at 1.3 m/s and 5 min at 2.0 m/s. Physical/lameness examinations were conducted every 14 days. Blood was collected every 28 days for analysis of serum bone biomarkers (SBB): bone alkaline phosphatase (BALP), procollagen type I amino-terminal propeptide (PINP), carboxy-telopeptide of type I collagen cross-links (CTX-I), tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase 5b (TRAP5b), and receptor activator of nuclear factor-kβ ligand (RANKL). RESULTS Sheep adapted easily to group exercise. Animals grew taller (P = .006) but had a 4% weight loss (P = .003). RANKL was reduced on days 28 and 84 compared to day 56 (P < .05), CTX-1 was reduced on days 28 and 84 compared to days 0 and 56 (P < .05), and TRAP5b was greater on day 28 compared to day 0 (P = .009). BALP and PINP did not change. CLINICAL RELEVANCE The described preclinical model of exercising sheep has distinct advantages including ease of handling, an established lameness scale, commercially available ovine SBB assays, and the ability to alter footing characteristics and complete circular exercise. Decreasing CTX-I and RANKL with no change in BALP and PINP suggests reduced bone resorption over the study period. Future studies may include a sedentary group or utilize adult animals to alleviate any influence of growth on SBB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Pharmacokinetics and plasma protein binding of a single dose of clodronate disodium are similar for juvenile sheep and horses.
- Author
-
Vergara-Hernandez, Fernando B., Nielsen, Brian D., Kottwitz, Jack J., Panek, Char L., Robison, Cara I., Paris, Brittany L., Welsh Jr., Thomas H., Bradbery, Amanda N., Leatherwood, Jessica L., and Colbath, Aimee C.
- Subjects
- *
BLOOD proteins , *PROTEIN binding , *HORSES , *LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry , *PHARMACOKINETICS , *SHEEP , *ANIMAL young , *SHEEP breeds - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine the single-dose pharmacokinetics of clodronate disodium (CLO) in juvenile sheep and the plasma protein binding (PPB) of CLO in juvenile sheep and horses. ANIMALS 11 juvenile crossbred sheep (252 ± 6 days) for the pharmacokinetic study. Three juvenile crossbred sheep (281 ± 4 days) and 3 juvenile Quarter Horses (599 ± 25 days) for PPB analysis. METHODS CLO concentrations were determined using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated by noncompartmental analysis from plasma samples obtained at 0, 0.5, 1, 3, 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hours after CLO administered IM at 0.6 mg/kg. PPB was determined using equine and ovine plasma in a singleuse rapid equilibrium dialysis system. RESULTS The mean and range for maximum plasma concentration (Cmax: 5,596; 2,396-8,613 ng/mL), time of maximal concentration (Tmax: 0.5; 0.5-1.0 h), and area under the curve (AUCall: 12,831; 7,590-17,593 h X ng/mL) were similar to those previously reported in horses. PPB in sheep and horses was moderate to high, with unbound fractions of 26.1 ± 5.1% in sheep and 18.7 ± 7.5% in horses, showing less than a 1.4-fold difference. CLINICAL RELEVANCE The pharmacokinetic parameters and PPB of CLO in juvenile sheep were similar to those previously reported in horses. The results suggest that juvenile sheep can be utilized as an animal model for studying the potential risks and/or benefits of bisphosphonate use in juvenile horses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Cows enrolled in a pilot randomized clinical trial evaluating pegbovigrastim administered to dairy cows at dry-off had reduced incidence of intramammary infection.
- Author
-
de Campos, Juliana Leite, Strickland, Jaimie M., Gandy, Jeff C., Robison, Cara I., and Ruegg, Pamela L.
- Subjects
- *
COWS , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *CLINICAL trials , *SALINE injections , *MILK yield , *DAIRY cattle - Abstract
OBJECTIVE The objective of this pilot study was to determine if an alternative dosing schedule of pegbovigrastim (PEG; Imrestor; Elanco Animal Health) affects mammary gland health, rear udder width, or milk production of healthy dairy cows. ANIMALS 20 pregnant late-lactation Holstein cows in November 2019 through April 2020. PROCEDURES Cows were randomly assigned to receive subcutaneous injections with either 15 mg of PEG (PEG group; n = 10) or a sham injection with saline (0.9% NaCl) solution (control group; 10) administered 7 days before dry-off and at dry-off. Quarter milk samples were collected for bacterial culture and somatic cells before and after dry-off and after calving. Mammary gland width was assessed before and after dry-off. Daily milk yields were evaluated after calving. RESULTS The incidence of intramammary infection was 5 times greater for quarters of cows in the control group than for quarters of cows that received PEG. The effect of treatment on somatic cell count was not significant, but the effects of period and a treatment-by-period interaction were identified. Treatment did not significantly affect milk production in the subsequent lactation, but the effects of period and an interaction of treatment by period were identified. Rear udder width after dry-off was not significantly affected by treatment, but an effect of period was identified. CLINICAL RELEVANCE In this pilot study, cows treated with PEG using an alternative dosing schedule had reduced incidence of intramammary infection and an interaction of treatment by sampling period was observed for milk yield. These results suggest that further studies with larger numbers of cows are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Microbiological Impact of Delayed Movement of Pullets.
- Author
-
Eberle-Krish, Krista N, Jones, Deana R, Gast, Richard K, Robison, Cara I, Anderson, Kenneth E, and Karcher, Darrin M
- Subjects
- *
BIRD populations , *SALMONELLA , *CAMPYLOBACTER , *ENTEROBACTERIACEAE , *PULLETS - Abstract
The depopulation of healthy birds during a disease outbreak can impact recovery and further disrupt the food supply. In 2015, the United States faced one of the largest outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza ever confirmed. Many of the 7 million pullets depopulated were healthy but could not be moved to laying facilities because of their location in quarantine zones. The objective of this study was to assess the impact of an early production induced molt on Salmonella and Campylobacter prevalence, as well as total aerobes and Enterobacteriaceae enumeration. Pullets were reared in a cage-free barn from 0 to 16 wk. At 17 wk, pullets were assigned to 1 of 4 treatments: control (AV), floor (FL), enrichment (EN), and molt (MT). AV was moved into an aviary system to begin lay, while FL, EN, and MT were brought into lay in the barn. When production reached 10%, a non-feed withdrawal diet was given to MT for 6 wk. Post-molt, all remaining treatments were moved to the aviary and maintained until 32 wk. Fecal, organ, and egg shell samples were collected and analyzed at the onset of lay, pre-molt, post-molt, and at depopulation to determine prevalence of Salmonella and Campylobacter. Total aerobic and Enterobacteriaceae loads were enumerated for egg shells collected from the litter, nest box, and aviary system wire. There was no difference for Salmonella and Campylobacter prevalence among treatments for all samples. While no difference was found in total aerobe plate counts pre-molt, there was a difference (P < 0.05) in Enterobacteriaceae for AV, FL, and MT. For MT, there was a reduction in total aerobe and Enterobacteriaceae loads from pre-molt to post-molt. While total aerobe and Enterobacteriaceae loads for egg location were found to be significantly different post-molt, biologically, the difference was not enough to be a concern once eggs are washed and sanitized. The results of this study indicate that early production molting of floor-reared pullets has little impact on egg safety once birds are moved into an aviary system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Exercising sheep as a preclinical model for musculoskeletal research.
- Author
-
Vergara-Hernandez FB, Nielsen BD, Panek CL, Robison CI, and Colbath AC
- Abstract
Objective: To establish an orthopedic, preclinical, ovine model of controlled exercise using an equine walker., Animals: 20 Dorset-Polypay sheep., Procedures: Sheep underwent 11 weeks of exercise, 4 days per week. Exercise duration and intensity increased until sheep performed 25 minutes at 1.3 m/s and 5 min at 2.0 m/s. Physical/lameness examinations were conducted every 14 days. Blood was collected every 28 days for analysis of serum bone biomarkers (SBB): bone alkaline phosphatase (BALP), procollagen type I amino-terminal propeptide (PINP), carboxy-telopeptide of type I collagen cross-links (CTX-I), tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase 5b (TRAP5b), and receptor activator of nuclear factor-kβ ligand (RANKL)., Results: Sheep adapted easily to group exercise. Animals grew taller (P = .006) but had a 4% weight loss (P = .003). RANKL was reduced on days 28 and 84 compared to day 56 (P < .05), CTX-1 was reduced on days 28 and 84 compared to days 0 and 56 (P < .05), and TRAP5b was greater on day 28 compared to day 0 (P = .009). BALP and PINP did not change., Clinical Relevance: The described preclinical model of exercising sheep has distinct advantages including ease of handling, an established lameness scale, commercially available ovine SBB assays, and the ability to alter footing characteristics and complete circular exercise. Decreasing CTX-I and RANKL with no change in BALP and PINP suggests reduced bone resorption over the study period. Future studies may include a sedentary group or utilize adult animals to alleviate any influence of growth on SBB.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Cows enrolled in a pilot randomized clinical trial evaluating pegbovigrastim administered to dairy cows at dry-off had reduced incidence of intramammary infection.
- Author
-
de Campos JL, Strickland JM, Gandy JC, Robison CI, and Ruegg PL
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Female, Cattle, Animals, Pilot Projects, Incidence, Lactation, Milk, Mammary Glands, Animal microbiology, Mastitis, Bovine drug therapy, Mastitis, Bovine prevention & control, Mastitis, Bovine epidemiology, Cattle Diseases
- Abstract
Objective: The objective of this pilot study was to determine if an alternative dosing schedule of pegbovigrastim (PEG; Imrestor; Elanco Animal Health) affects mammary gland health, rear udder width, or milk production of healthy dairy cows., Animals: 20 pregnant late-lactation Holstein cows in November 2019 through April 2020., Procedures: Cows were randomly assigned to receive subcutaneous injections with either 15 mg of PEG (PEG group; n = 10) or a sham injection with saline (0.9% NaCl) solution (control group; 10) administered 7 days before dry-off and at dry-off. Quarter milk samples were collected for bacterial culture and somatic cells before and after dry-off and after calving. Mammary gland width was assessed before and after dry-off. Daily milk yields were evaluated after calving., Results: The incidence of intramammary infection was 5 times greater for quarters of cows in the control group than for quarters of cows that received PEG. The effect of treatment on somatic cell count was not significant, but the effects of period and a treatment-by-period interaction were identified. Treatment did not significantly affect milk production in the subsequent lactation, but the effects of period and an interaction of treatment by period were identified. Rear udder width after dry-off was not significantly affected by treatment, but an effect of period was identified., Clinical Relevance: In this pilot study, cows treated with PEG using an alternative dosing schedule had reduced incidence of intramammary infection and an interaction of treatment by sampling period was observed for milk yield. These results suggest that further studies with larger numbers of cows are warranted.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Impact of Circular Exercise Diameter on Bone and Joint Health of Juvenile Animals.
- Author
-
Logan AA, Nielsen BD, Hiney KM, Robison CI, Manfredi JM, Buskirk DD, and Popovich JM Jr
- Abstract
Circular exercise is used in many equestrian disciplines and this study aimed to determine if circle diameter impacts juvenile animal forelimb bone and joint health. On day 0, 24 calves at 9 weeks of age were assigned the following exercise treatments: small circle (12 m clockwise), large circle (18-m clockwise), treadmill, or non-exercised control. Exercise was initiated at 1.1−1.5 m/s for 5 min/d and increased 5 min weekly until reaching 30 min/d. On day 49, synovial fluid was collected from multiple joints, cartilage was collected from the proximal surface of fused third and fourth metacarpi (MC III and IV), and forelimbs underwent computed tomography scans. A statistical analysis (PROC mixed) was performed in SAS 9.4. The inside leg of the small circle treatment had a larger MC III and IV dorsopalmar external diameter than the outside (p = 0.05). The medial proximal phalanx had a greater mediolateral diameter than the lateral proximal phalanx of the small circle treatment (p = 0.01). Fetlock nitric oxide was greater in the large circle and treadmill treatments (p < 0.0001). Cartilage glycosaminoglycan concentration was greater in the outside leg of the small circle exercise treatment than the inside leg (p = 0.03). Even at slow speeds, circular exercise diameter can impact joint and bone health, but faster speeds may have greater alterations.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Average stride length and stride rate of Thoroughbreds and Quarter Horses during racing.
- Author
-
Vergara-Hernandez FB, Nielsen BD, Robison CI, Fabus TA, Kompare JL, LeCompte Lazić RA, and Colbath AC
- Abstract
The main factors influencing speed in athletes are stride length (SL) and stride rate (SR). However, conflict remains whether SL or SR is the key determinant of higher speeds. Quarter Horses (QH) generally reach higher speeds in their races than do Thoroughbreds (TB). However, the influence of SL and SR on this greater speed is unclear. Therefore, the main objective of this study was to compare SL and SR in QH and TB raced in short (sprint) and long (classic) distances. We hypothesized that QH have a higher SR in comparison to TB, and SR decreases as distance increases. Two race distances were analyzed for each breed: QH races of 100.6 and 402.3 m, and TB races of 1,207.0 and 2,011.7 m. Data from 20 horses were obtained, consisting of five horses from each race distance (10 QH and 10 TB). Five individuals watched recordings of each race three times counting the number of strides taken by each winning horse. The SR was calculated using the average number of strides over a given race duration, and SL was determined by calculating the total number of strides over the distance covered. Speed was calculated by dividing the distance by the time of the winning horse. The PROC Mixed Procedure was used to identify statistical differences between breeds, and between distances within the same breed. Results showed that although the SL of the TB was longer in comparison with the QH ( P < 0.001), the average SR in QH was higher than in TB (2.88 vs. 2.34 + 0.03 strides/s; P < 0.001). Furthermore, QH classic distance demonstrated a faster speed than TB at either distance ( P < 0.001). In conclusion, QH achieve a higher SR in comparison to TB (between 14% and 20% more than TB), confirming the importance of SR in achieving high racing speeds., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society of Animal Science 2021.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Impact of Gait and Diameter during Circular Exercise on Front Hoof Area, Vertical Force, and Pressure in Mature Horses.
- Author
-
Logan AA, Nielsen BD, Robison CI, Hallock DB, Manfredi JM, Hiney KM, Buskirk DD, and Popovich JM Jr
- Abstract
Circular exercise can be used at varying gaits and diameters to exercise horses, with repeated use anecdotally relating to increased lameness. This work sought to characterize mean area, mean vertical force, and mean pressure of the front hooves while exercising in a straight line at the walk and trot, and small (10-m diameter) and large circles (15-m diameter) at the walk, trot, and canter. Nine mature horses wore Tekscan
TM Hoof Sensors on their forelimbs adhered with a glue-on shoe. Statistical analysis was performed in SAS 9.4 with fixed effects of leg, gait, and exercise type (PROC GLIMMIX) and p < 0.05 as significant. For all exercise types, the walk had greater mean pressure than the trot ( p < 0.01). At the walk, the straight line had greater mean area loaded than the large circle ( p = 0.01), and both circle sizes had lower mean vertical force than the straight line ( p = 0.003). During circular exercise at the canter, the outside front limb had greater mean area loaded than at the walk and trot ( p = 0.001). This study found that gait is an important factor when evaluating circular exercise and should be considered when exercising horses to prevent injury.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Growth Dependent Changes in Pressure Sensing Walkway Data for Turkeys.
- Author
-
Kremer JA, Robison CI, and Karcher DM
- Abstract
Genetic selection for rapidly growing turkeys has created an unfavorable consequence impacting the skeletal system resulting in long bone distortions. These distortions have resulted in locomotor problems, gait abnormalities, leg weakness, or lameness issues. These effects raise welfare concerns along with animal agriculture inefficiency in the form of lost product. The purpose was to determine baseline gait and force distribution in visibly unimpaired growing turkey hens. Hendrix commercial turkey hen poults ( n = 100) were placed on pine wood shavings providing 0.78 m
2 per bird with ad libitum access to feed and water at the MSU Poultry Farm. Fifty hens were randomly selected at 5 weeks and identified with a leg band to ensure longitudinal data collection. The turkeys were walked across a pressure-sensing walkway (PSW, Tekscan, Boston, MA) and weighed at 5, 6, 8, and 10 weeks of age. PSW collected data on gait length, gait time, step force and step length, and the statistics were analyzed with SAS. Both temporospatial data, including step time and step length, and kinetic data, including peak downward force, and vertical impulse, were recorded. Body weight increased linearly with age ( P < 0.001), demonstrating a typical growth pattern. Gait cycle time and peak vertical force (PVF) all displayed no difference between right and left sides, indicating that the hens had no detectable gait abnormalities. Gait velocity increased with age ( P = 0.02) suggesting hens' growth impacted their gait velocity. The gait cycle time ( P < 0.01) did not correspond with age. PVF increased linearly with age ( P < 0.01) from 6 weeks (2.23 kg) to 10 weeks of age (5.91 kg). PVF/kg body weight ( P < 0.01) increased from 6 weeks of age (96.9% BW) to 8 weeks of age (106%BW). Overall, the birds were not lame and some data was influenced by the hen's adjustment to the materials or stage of growth; in contrast, some temporospatial data did not coincide with age. The PSW could be used to detect locomotor issues in commercially produced turkey hens providing another tool for assessing well-being.- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.