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Feeding Fallacies - 6 December 2004

Supplied by Kentucky Equine Research (KER) and discusses fallacies on a range of feeds from oats, corn, Beet pulp, bran, molasses, oil, and animal fats.

One hundred years ago most people would not have dreamed that horses would be drinking electrolyte-tinged water, devouring rations spiked with beet pulp, corn oil, and animal fat, or scarfing down sundry supplements. For most horses, even the ones that earned their keep by ploughing the family fields, transporting the town physician from house to house, or carrying the leisure class from one societal function to the next, a steady diet of hay or pasture and perhaps some oats or corn kept them in adequate body condition. With the advent of the automobile and the transition of the horse from the ranks of necessity to the ranks of recreation, horses were asked to perform more athletic endeavours. The need to jump higher, gallop faster, and trot further became paramount to equestrians, and research in equine nutrition escalated as the level of competitiveness rose. As research refined nutrient requirements, scientists sought ways to efficiently deliver maximal nutrients. In recent years, researchers have turned to new feedstuffs in an effort to find magic fuels. Despite continued efforts, there is a reliance upon the time-honoured feeding methods of years ago.

Whether horsemen are feeding long-adored or newfangled feedstuffs, lore surrounds some of the offerings. Unravelling the mysteries and fallacies of common feed ingredients is not as difficult as one may believe.

Oats

Oats are a favourite feed among horses and horsemen alike. In preference tests, horses consistently choose oats over many other feeds, including cracked or whole corn, lucerne hay, wheat, barley, rye, and soybean meal. Oats are used extensively in the creation of commercially prepared feeds, with some containing over 30% oats. Much of their popularity as a feed for horses may be due to habit as much as tradition. Ask any non-horseman what horses eat and invariably oats and hay, and maybe grass, will come up. Peace of mind may also induce owners to feed oats as they are the safest of all cereal grains for horses, being relatively high in fibre and low in digestible energy. Some horsemen believe oats must be crimped, rolled, or otherwise processed to be of maximal nutritional value to horses. This is erroneous and a particularly unfortunate mistruth because horsemen typically pay more for processed oats. Yes, it’s true that aged horses with poor teeth may derive more nutrients from processed oats, but the majority of the equine population can extract a similar level of nutrition from whole as from crimped oats.

In addition, heavy oats (also called racehorse or jockey oats) usually weigh more per unit of volume than regular oats, and they generally contain little foreign material. However, the nutritional content of heavy oats is quite similar to other oats, despite rumours to the contrary. The more consistent quality of heavy oats makes them more appealing to some horsemen.

Naked oats are amassing quite a following among horsemen. Unlike other varieties, naked oats do not develop hulls. As such, they have greater nutritive value than do regular or heavy oats. Absence of the hull makes naked oats much more similar to grains that are naturally devoid of hulls such as corn, wheat, and rye. Hence, they are more energy dense. In addition, naked oats are higher in fat, registering at about 9 percent compared to the 5 percent of regular oats. Without hulls, however, the safety margin often taken for granted by horse owners is lost because the fibre content plummets, leaving the horse more susceptible to illness should over consumption occur.

Corn

Like other hull-less cereal grains, corn is a high-energy feed. Notwithstanding popular opinion, corn does not make horses unmanageable, high spirited or obese when fed in proper amounts. Corn is more energy dense per pound than oats and other cereal grains. Each kernel contains 60 to 70 percent starch, which is broken down to glucose in the small intestine. This sugar can be used immediately for energy or stored in the liver or muscle cells as glycogen until needed. Oats, on the other hand, contain on average 45 to 50 percent starch and about 15 percent less digestible energy on a kilo for kilo basis. Therefore, if fed to provide equal amounts of energy (and not on a volume basis), corn has no more of a propensity to make a horse high-strung or obese than other cereal grains.

Corn is a “hot” feed in the context of high energy, but not in the context of its ability to generate body heat. This fact may surprise some horsemen. If corn and oats are fed to provide identical quantities of digestible energy, oats will produce greater body heat because they are more fibrous. Corn contains approximately two percent fibre while it is common for oats to contain 10 percent fibre. As fibre undergoes microbial fermentation in the hindgut, heat is produced. Therefore, oats actually produce more body heat than corn, but neither can produce the degree of heat provided by hay.

Beet Pulp

Beet pulp is an incredible source of dietary fibre but often gets a bad rap among horsemen despite several nutritional benefits. Horses depend on fibre as an energy source. In particular, horses asked to perform over long periods of time benefit from high levels of dietary fibre.

Despite its usefulness in the diets of many horses, much lore surrounds beet pulp. One of the most popular myths regarding beet pulp is the need to soak it prior to feeding. While there is no harm in soaking beet pulp before it is fed, it is not necessary. Some horse owners believe that, due to its absorptive capacity, beet pulp will swell once it encounters the digestive juices in the stomach, causing the stomach to rupture. This is unfounded and easily negated. The holding capacity of the stomach is under hormonal direction. As the stomach walls expand, the hormone motilin stimulates the emptying of the stomach into the small intestine, so there is little chance of the stomach perforating.

Contrary to popular opinion, beet pulp doesn’t make horses choke, and it doesn’t contribute too much sugar to the diet. Beet pulp is a by-product of the sugar beet industry. Table sugar is created by the extraction of simple sugars from sugar beets. Modern mechanisms used to extract the sucrose from sugar beets are extremely efficient, leaving the beet pulp almost sugarless. 4.5kg of beet pulp supplies approximately the same amount of sugar as a few apples, so the notion that beet pulp is superabundant in sugar is simple hogwash.

Bran

Bran is the seed coat or outer layer of a cereal grain. For many years, the primary use of bran was in bran mashes, and recipes for these concoctions abound. The two primary ingredients in a typical bran mash are wheat bran and hot water, with other ingredients added based on the preferences of horses or the imagination of the caretaker. Through the ages, bran mashes have been touted as effective laxatives, but this has been refuted by scientific trials, which have shown no increase in faecal water content or associated softening of stool. Further, bran mashes also do not prevent colic.

Some horsemen believe that bran will increase the fibrous component of the diet. Bran does contain fibre (although interestingly not as much fibre as oats!), but fibre can be introduced into the diet in more efficient ways. Any type of hay, for instance, contains significantly more fibre than wheat bran. So, are there any benefits to feeding bran mashes? A bran mash adds liquid to the diet and may therefore improve hydration status in horses that have reduced water intake due to cold weather, endurance horses at rest stops or those that refuse to drink water from an unfamiliar source. But this is only a short-term remedy to reduced fluid consumption, and measures to increase voluntary water ingestion should be made.

While bran mashes have been a staple in some stables for many years, rice bran has become a popular feedstuff amongst the avalanche of new-age feeds. Rice bran is rich in fat. In fact, rice bran is typically 20% fat, and as fat levels increase, caloric density of the diet escalates. Therefore, rice bran is energy dense and may be the perfect feed for the horse that requires large amounts of dietary energy, such as lactating mares or heavily worked performance horses. The addition of rice bran to the diet can actually decrease the amount of grain being fed because of its high energy content. This makes it a very useful supplement for those horses that need to be maintained on a low starch diet due to tying up syndrome, starch intolerance etc.

Some concern regarding the high levels of phosphorus found naturally in rice bran has been voiced since the popularity of the feedstuff skyrocketed. Rice bran is high in phosphorus (1.2%) and low in calcium (0.1%), and this extreme difference may skew the calcium to phosphorus ratio of the diet. Excessive phosphorus in the diet inhibits calcium absorption. When calcium is not derived from the diet, it is leached from the bone, and connective tissue is used as a filler, causing the bones to enlarge. The most obvious effect of excessive dietary phosphorus is malformation of the facial bones or “big head.” Interestingly, this syndrome was once known as miller’s disease because overfeeding of bran was implicated as the cause decades ago. Some rice bran products, including Equi-Jewel, contain added calcium to balance the calcium to phosphorus ratio. Such products are superior to straight rice bran because they do not upset the balance of calcium and phosphorus in the total diet.

Molasses

It’s sticky, smells good, and horses love it, but does molasses cause colic? Probably not. Molasses is the liquid residue that remains after the sap of sugar cane (blackstrap) and sugar beets is condensed and sugar crystals are formed. Pure molasses is too thick and gummy to be handled by ordinary feed mill equipment, so it’s often diluted before being added to grain mixes. While molasses does increase the palatability of feed, it’s also useful for reducing dustiness of a feed and discouraging sorting of ingredients within a mixture.

When all other avenues of explanation fail, molasses has been incriminated as a cause of colic. Sweet feeds (those that contain molasses) are more likely to mould when stored improperly in hot weather than are pelleted feeds or straight grains. The presence of mould inhibitors in most formulations preclude this problem, but it is wise to buy small quantities of feed at a time during hot weather. Rotating feed ensures that the oldest feed is used first and this too is a sound management practice.

Others feel the small intestine is unable to digest the glucose typically found in a sweet feed meal, and it squeaks by into the hindgut, possibly causing colic. Because most sweet feeds contain only 5-10% molasses, this is unlikely. In conclusion, do not place too much stock in molasses as the culprit in acute or chronic colic.

Oil

Corn oil and other vegetable oils (such as soy, safflower, canola, etc.) are commonly used as supplements due to their significant caloric content and their high digestibility. They are useful additives for increasing the energy density of rations. However, as a safeguard against colic, vegetable oils are not effective. Digestibility of vegetable oils is high (close to 90%) and usually it is digested before it ever reaches the hindgut. This feeding myth is likely related to the fact that mineral oil is often given to relieve impactions in horses with colic. However, mineral oil is completely indigestible and serves only to lubricate the gastrointestinal tract in an attempt to dislodge the obstructive mass.

Animal Fat

Controversy swirls around the use of animal fats in horse feeds. Truth be known, feed-grade animal fats provide the same benefits to horses as do most vegetable oils. They increase energy density of a meal, settle dust in a feed, discourage sifting of fines or other material, and promote a glossy hair coat. Animal fats are less digestible than vegetable oils because they may not be as pure. In addition, they are not as palatable to horses as some vegetable oils, particularly corn oil, but the majority of horses will eat them willingly. All in all, however, animal fats have proven to be just as effective as other fats.

Feeding horses properly is not difficult. Reliance upon an educated horseman, a veterinarian, or an equine nutritionist is paramount if a feeding management question arises. This is particularly true when confronted with an old wife’s tale that may or may not be accurate. For specific advice on nutritional questions contact NRM www.riding-room.co.nz .



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