The horse’s digestive system is designed for the free-grazing animal. The digestive system is designed to process small amounts of food frequently and convert the food into nutrients that can be absorbed to produce energy. Because owners have busy schedules, the horse no longer is able to eat small amounts of frequently. Instead, he usually is fed a large quantity of food, sometimes just once a day. The larger amount of food can cause problems such as colic.
Understanding the equine digestive system can make your horse healthier and give you fewer worries about gastric upset. This 10th installment of the anatomy and physiology series examines the horse’s digestive system. We provide the horse owner and caretaker with a look at how this “factory” is designed and how it functions.
More from the Horse Anatomy and Physiology Series series
View the complete Horse Anatomy and Physiology Series series
Related Articles
- Study Evaluates Unintentional Weight Loss in Horses
- Effects of Food Deprivation on Horses' Cardiac Function
- Supportive Care for Foals with Pharyngeal Dysfunction
- Top Medicine Studies of 2011 (AAEP 2011)
- Monitoring and Preventing EPE on Endemic Farms (AAEP 2011)
- The Equine Digestive Tract and How it Relates to Colic
- Monitoring and Preventing Equine Proliferative Enteropathy
- Equine Proliferative Enteropathy: A Growing Concern
- Gastrointestinal Tract Infection Will Decide Uncle Mo's Derby Fate
- Microbial Colonization of the Foal's GI Tract











