Browsing by Author "Adams B"
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- ItemA novel load cell-supported research platform to measure vertical and horizontal motion of a horse’s centre of mass during trailer transport(Elsevier, 4/02/2021) Colborne G; Tang L; Adams B; Gordon BI; McCabe BE; Riley CBDuring transport, horses are subjected to acceleration in three dimensions, rapid braking, turning, noise, and other stressors. The animal's ability to make postural corrections may be insufficient to prevent injury or distress, and so knowledge of the compensatory motion patterns of the horse in the trailer is a necessary precondition for smart design of transport systems. A custom two-horse trailer was built for this project. It had a horse compartment 1.85 m wide by 3.95 m long, with adjustable bulkheads and a centre divider separating the horses. The floor was instrumented with 24 shearbeam load cells to measure the vertical load imposed by each horse and its horizontal motion. Two horses were driven on a 56 km trip on both rural and urban roads. Load data were collected at 100 Hz for the 58-minute trip and were filtered with a cut-off frequency of 5 Hz using a Butterworth low-pass filter and then vertical acceleration computed. A pivot table counted sign reversals in the vertical acceleration signal, and vertical displacement was calculated using the fundamental frequency of the resulting acceleration data. Total vertical motion was calculated by making the negative displacements absolute and summing these with the positive displacements, and vertical work done was calculated by multiplying the force by the displacement measures. Horizontal motion was calculated by averaging the transverse and cranio-caudal position of the centre of pressure every second and adding the resultant displacements. Absolute vertical displacement of the two horses was 69.55 m and 97.56 m. In addition to the work done by standing, vertical work done in response to vibration was 322.4 kJ and 443.2 kJ. Horizontal excursion was 227.1 m and 243.0 m. This is a first effort to quantify the additional workload imposed on animals during transport, which will aid in the design of smart transport vehicles that will minimize the stress to horses.
- ItemComparison of the cyathostomin egg reappearance times for ivermectin, moxidectin and abamectin in horses in consecutive egg count reduction tests in winter and summer over two years(New Zealand Veterinary Association, 2021) Scott I; Gee E; Rogers C; Pomroy B; Reilly M; Adlington B; Miller F; Smith A; Legg K; Adams BShortened cyathostomin egg reappearance periods (ERP) serve as a warning of developing anthelmintic resistance (Scott et al., 2015). Efficacy is thought to have declined more rapidly for the later larval stages (L4) than for the egg laying adults, so that animals still show zero or near zero counts for a period after treatment, but with L4 now surviving treatment the ERP has shortened.
- ItemLongitudinal Testing of Leptospira Antibodies in Horses Located near a Leptospirosis Outbreak in Alpacas.(12/08/2022) Bolwell C; Gee E; Adams B; Collins-Emerson J; Scarfe K; Nisa S; Gordon E; Rogers C; Benschop JThe objectives of this study were to determine if horses located near an outbreak of leptospirosis in alpacas had Leptospira titres indicative of a previous or current infection and, if so, to determine the magnitude in change of titres over time. Further, the objective was to determine if horses with high titre results were shedding Leptospira in their urine. Blood samples were collected from twelve horses located on or next to the farm with the outbreak in alpacas, on day zero and at four subsequent time points (two, four, six and nine weeks). The microscopic agglutination test was used to test sera for five serovars endemic in New Zealand: Ballum, Copenhageni, Hardjo, Pomona and Tarassovi. A reciprocal MAT titre cut-off of ≥1:100 was used to determine positive horses. Seven out of twelve horses (58%) were positive to at least one serovar during one of the time points. Two horses recorded titres of ≥1600, one for both Pomona and Copenhageni and the other for Hardjo, and these two horses were both PCR positive for Leptospira in their urine samples. For five out of seven horses, the titres either remained the same or changed by one dilution across the sampling time points. The study confirmed endemic exposure to five endemic Leptospira serovars in New Zealand in a group of horses located near a confirmed leptospirosis outbreak in alpacas.