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Preface The Mystery of Horse Pasture Characteristics of Good Pasture Pasture Usage, Stocking, Costs Pasture Quality Summer Pasture Grass Choices Bermudagrass Crabgrass Johnsongrass Native Grasses Old World Bluestems Bahiagrass Sorghum Grass, Sudangrass, Millet Weeping & Annual Lovegrass Other Grasses Mixtures from Summer Grass Base Bermudagrass-Crabgrass Bermudagrass-Weep. Lovegrass Bermudagrass-O.W. Bluestem Bermudagrass-Fescue O.W. Bluestem-Weep. Lovegrass Winter Pasture Grass Choices Annual Winter Pasture Grasses Varieties Establishment Techniques Planting Dates and Rates Fertilization Pasture and Grazing Management Perennial Winter Pasture Grasses Fescue Smooth Bromegrass Rescuegrass (Bromegrass) Wheatgrasses Orchardgrass Perennial Ryegrass Legumes Summer Legumes Alfalfa Lespedeza Winter Legumes Clovers Vetch Pasture Production Management Forage Fertilization for Production Weed and Brush Control Grazing or Use Management Horse Grazing Characteristics Changing Pastures Creep Grazing Rotational Grazing Approaches Fencing Horse Research on Forages Bermudagrass/Other Grass/Alfalfa Palatability Poisonous Plant Considerations Definite Poisonous Plants Fescue Toxicity German & Pearl Millet Toxicities Sorghum Grass Toxicities Secondary Toxicities or Ailments Associated Horse Ailments Potential Fence Toxicities References |
Poisonous Plant Considerations One of the considerations for chemical and other weed control in horse pasture is the control or elimination of poisonous plants. There are few forage areas devoid of all toxic plants. Most toxic plants are broad-leaved. Horses normally don't relish broad-leaved weeds, but they do if grass forage is limited. Horses tend to browse weeds more when on a higher-concentrate, low-fiber ration. Having a few toxic plants available does not mean there is an acute problem. Plant toxicities may be grouped in two categories:
We cannot discuss in detail horse poisoning symptoms and treatment here, but we mention a few pertinent items. The list includes primarily common potentially toxic plants but not absolute toxicity syndromes of the plants. Definite Poisonous Plants
Fescue Toxicity Fescue pasture may be the single most-studied forage specifically for horses primarily because it causes reproductive problems in mares. The toxicity syndrome is variable, with problems including poor performance on pasture, abortion, and reproductive tract malfunctions such as an overly thick placenta that colts cannot break out of. Problems also include sick colts, dead colts, and agalactia (mare does not lactate well), a major syndrome. Summer slump, fescue foot, and fat necrosis problems with cattle grazing fescue have not been directly associated with horses. Fescue is a tremendous forage in acreage and production per acre in the eastern half of the United States. It contributes much to cattle and horse forage programs. Fescue toxicity may affect only 1 percent of horses, but 100 percent of the mares in a given herd may have the problem. The effect of endophyte-free fescue on horses is not completely understood. However, indications are that endophyte-free fescue and novel endophyte fescue do not cause the toxicity problems. The problem with horses grazing endophyte-containing fescue is almost entirely associated with foal-producing mares. Apparently other classes of horses can be grazed on well-managed fescue quite successfully when husbandry practices are good. The following precautions should be applied when grazing horses on endophyte fescue:
German Millet and Pearl Millet Toxicities Foxtail or German millet can be used, along with other roughages, for horse forage. They are an alternative to producing sudangrass or other sorghum forages. Some pearl millet reportedly has an alkaloid buildup that can induce cattle toxicity. Horses may react to these alkaloids because they are susceptible to alkaloid toxicity syndromes. All millets can accumulate nitrates, which in grazing or haying millets can reach toxic proportions. Nitrate can be controlled somewhat by reducing the amount of nitrogen per application and increasing the number of applications. German millet can cause oral mechanical lesions.
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© 1997-2008 by The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Inc.
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