Equine Gut Microbiota Research Update

Learn about the innerworkings of horses’ digestive tracts and how the bacteria that reside there impact health.
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Equine Gut Microbiota Research Update
German researchers compared the intestinal microbiota of healthy horses (left) with that of horses with acute colitis (right). Photo: Courtesy Dr. Gerald Fritz Schusser
By now, you’ve probably heard about the diverse microbial communities that inhabit your horse’s gastrointestinal tract—collectively called the gut microbiota. Researchers know these tiny microorganisms have a major impact on horse health, and disruptions to the microbiota can result in a number of life-threatening conditions, such as colic, colitis, colitis, antibiotic-associated diarrhea, and laminitis. Essentially, a healthy or unhealthy microbiome could mean the difference between life and death for your horse.

However, scientists have only been studying the microbiota since the early 2000s, and are still improving the techniques they can use to examine it. As such, researchers are rapidly making new discoveries about the equine gut microbiota and how it reacts to a number of variables. At the 2017 International Equine Colic Research Symposium, held July 18-20, in Lexington, Kentucky, researchers from around the world presented their latest microbiome-related findings. Following is a recap of a selection of the research shared.

Microbial Stability

Researchers know that horses’ gut microbiota can change rapidly with dietary concentrate or forage adjustments, potentially leading to gastrointestinal upset. But it wasn’t clear whether gut microbiota remain change or stable when horses live on one particular pasture for a year with supplemental forage, but without concentrate feed. So, researchers from the University of Liverpool and the University of Leicester, both in the U.K. conducted a year-long study to find out. They found that pasture-kept horses’ microbial populations are in a slow, but constant, state of change in response to multiple factors, including season, the weather, and what type of forage they’re eating (grass alone or grass and haylage).

The same research team also evaluated gut microbiota in periparturient (around the time of birth) broodmares, a group of horses known to be at risk for colic

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Written by:

Erica Larson, former news editor for The Horse, holds a degree in journalism with an external specialty in equine science from Michigan State University in East Lansing. A Massachusetts native, she grew up in the saddle and has dabbled in a variety of disciplines including foxhunting, saddle seat, and mounted games. Currently, Erica competes in eventing with her OTTB, Dorado.

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