14 results on '"Sutherland, B. L."'
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2. Interaction between some pasture species and 2 'Hieracium' species
- Author
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Scott, D. and Sutherland, B. L.
- Published
- 1993
3. Effect of Ambient and Black-Globe Temperature on Plasma Prolactin Levels in Ewes Grazing Endophyte-Free and Endophyte Infected Ryegrass
- Author
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Fletcher, L. R., Sutherland, B. L., Fletcher, C. G., Bacon, Charles W., editor, and Hill, Nicholas S., editor
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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4. One thousand plant transcriptomes and the phylogenomics of green plants
- Author
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Leebens, Mack J.H., Graham, S.W, Wong, G.K-S., DeGironimo, L., Edger, P.P., Jordon-Thaden, I.E., Joya, S., Melkonian, B., Miles, N.W., Pokorny Montero, L., Quigley, C., Thomas, P., Villarreal, J.C., Augustin, M.M., Barrett, M.D., Baucom, R.S., Beerling, D.J., Benstein, R.M., Biffin, E., Brockington, S.F., Burge, D.O., Burris, J.N., Burris, K.P., Burtet-Sarramegna, V., Caicedo, A.L., Cannon, S.B., Çebi, Z., Chang, Y., Chater, C., Cheeseman, J.M., Chen, T., Clarke, N.D., Clayton, H., Covshoff, S., Crandall-Stotler, B.J., Cross, H., Determann, R., Dickson, R.C., Di Stilio, V.S., Ellis, S., Fast, E., Feja, N., Field, K.J., Filatov, D.A., Finnegan, P.M., Floyd, S.K., Fogliani, B., GarcÍa, N., Gâteblé, G., Godden, G.T., Goh, Q., Greiner, S., Harkess, A., Heaney, Mike J., Helliwell, K.E., Heyduk, K., Hibberd, J.M., Hodel, R.G.J., Hollingsworth, P.M., Johnson, M.T.J., Jost, R., Joyce, B., Kapralov, M.V., Kazamia, E., Kellogg, E.A., Koch, M.A., Von Konrat, M., Könyves, K., Kutchan, T.M., Lam, V., Larsson, A., Leitch, A.R., Lentz, R., Li, F.-W., Lowe, A.J., Ludwig, M., Manos, P.S., Mavrodiev, E., McCormick, M.K., McKain, M, McLellan, T., McNeal, J., Miller, R., Nelson, M.N., Peng, Y., Ralph, P., Real, D., Riggins, C.W., Ruhsam, M., Sage, R.F., Sakai, A.K., Scascitella, M., Schilling, E.E., Schlösser, E., Sederoff, H., Servick, S., Shaw, A.J., Shaw, S.W., Sigel, E.M., Skema, C., Smith, A.G., Smithson, A., NeilStewart, C., Stinchcombe, J.R., Szövényi, P., Tate, J.A., Tiebel, H., Trapnell, D., Villegente, M., Wang, C., Weller, S.G., Wenzel, M., Weststrand, S., Westwood, J.H., Whigham, D.F., Wulff, A.S., Yang, Y., Zhu, D., Zhuang, C., Zuidof, J., Chase, M.W., Deyholos, M.K., Graham, S.W., Pires, J. Chris, Rothfels, C.J., Chen, C., Chen, L., Cheng, S., Li, J., Li, R., Li, X., Lu, H., Ou, Y., Tan, X., Tang, J., Tian, Z., Wang, F., Wang, J., Wei, X., Wong, G. K.-S., Xu, X., Yan, Z., Yang, F., Zhong, X., Zhou, F., Zhu, Y., Zhang, Y., Yu, J., Barkman, T. J., Carpenter, E. J., Liu, T., Sun, X., Wu, S., Mirarab, S., Nguyen, N., Gitzendanner, M. A., Ayyampalayam, S., Der, J., Matasci, N., Sayyari, E., Soltis, D. E., Soltis, P. S., Stevenson, D. W., Wafula, E. K., Walls, R., Wickett, N. J., De Pamphilis, C. W., Graham, S. W, Leebens-Mack, J. H., Warnow, T., Li, Z., An, H., Arrigo, N., Baniaga, A. E., Galuska, S., Jorgensen, S. A., Kidder, T. I., Kong, H., Lu-Irving, P., Marx, H. E., Qi, X., Reardon, C. R., Sessa, E. B., Sutherland, B. L., Tiley, G. P., Welles, S. R., Yu, R., Zhan, S., Barker, M. S., Porsch, M., Ullrich, K. K., Gramzow, L., Melkonian, M., Nelson, D. R., Theißen, G., Wong, G. K. S., Grosse, I., Rensing, S. A., Quint, M., Institut de sciences exactes et appliquées (ISEA), Université de la Nouvelle-Calédonie (UNC), Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, National Key Research and Development Program (China), Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China, Filatov, D, One Thousand Plant Transcriptomes Initiative, and School of Plant and Environmental Sciences
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Genome evolution ,Nuclear gene ,631/208/212/2306 ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Viridiplantae ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,Article ,Evolution, Molecular ,03 medical and health sciences ,Plant evolution ,Phylogenomics ,Databases, Genetic ,Glaucophyta ,631/449/2669 ,631/181/735 ,Plastid ,Phylogeny ,45/90 ,030304 developmental biology ,45/91 ,Adaptive radiation ,0303 health sciences ,631/181/759/2467 ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Archaeplastida ,fungi ,Botany ,food and beverages ,Botanik ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,Biological Evolution ,Evolutionary biology ,Molecular evolution ,Transcriptome ,Genome, Plant ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Green plants (Viridiplantae) include around 450,000–500,000 species1,2 of great diversity and have important roles in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Here, as part of the One Thousand Plant Transcriptomes Initiative, we sequenced the vegetative transcriptomes of 1,124 species that span the diversity of plants in a broad sense (Archaeplastida), including green plants (Viridiplantae), glaucophytes (Glaucophyta) and red algae (Rhodophyta). Our analysis provides a robust phylogenomic framework for examining the evolution of green plants. Most inferred species relationships are well supported across multiple species tree and supermatrix analyses, but discordance among plastid and nuclear gene trees at a few important nodes highlights the complexity of plant genome evolution, including polyploidy, periods of rapid speciation, and extinction. Incomplete sorting of ancestral variation, polyploidization and massive expansions of gene families punctuate the evolutionary history of green plants. Notably, we find that large expansions of gene families preceded the origins of green plants, land plants and vascular plants, whereas whole-genome duplications are inferred to have occurred repeatedly throughout the evolution of flowering plants and ferns. The increasing availability of high-quality plant genome sequences and advances in functional genomics are enabling research on genome evolution across the green tree of life., The One Thousand Plant Transcriptomes Initiative provides a robust phylogenomic framework for examining green plant evolution that comprises the transcriptomes and genomes of diverse species of green plants.
- Published
- 2019
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5. Molecular evolution of theLi/lichemical defence polymorphism in white clover (Trifolium repensL.)
- Author
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OLSEN, K. M., primary, SUTHERLAND, B. L., additional, and SMALL, L. L., additional
- Published
- 2007
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6. Allelopathic effects of endophyte‐infected perennial ryegrass extracts on white clover seedlings
- Author
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Sutherland, B. L., primary, Hume, D. E., additional, and Tapper, B. A., additional
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- 1999
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7. Molecular evolution of the Li/li chemical defence polymorphism in white clover ( Trifolium repens L.).
- Author
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OLSEN, K. M., SUTHERLAND, B. L., and SMALL, L. L.
- Subjects
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GENETIC polymorphisms , *MOLECULAR biology , *CLOVER , *POLYMERASE chain reaction , *POLYMERIZATION , *GENE amplification , *GLUCOSIDASES , *GLYCOSIDASES , *PULLULANASE - Abstract
White clover ( Trifolium repens) is naturally polymorphic for cyanogenesis (hydrogen cyanide release following tissue damage). The ecological factors favouring cyanogenic and acyanogenic plants have been examined in numerous studies over the last half century, making this one of the best-documented examples of an adaptive polymorphism in plants. White clover cyanogenesis is controlled by two, independently segregating Mendelian genes: Ac/ac controls the presence/absence of cyanogenic glucosides; and Li/li controls the presence/absence of their hydrolysing enzyme, linamarase. In this study, we examine the molecular evolution and population genetics of Li as it relates to the cyanogenesis polymorphism. We report here that Li exists as a single-copy gene in plants possessing linamarase activity, and that the absence of enzyme activity in li/li plants is correlated with the absence of much or all of the gene from the white clover genome. Consistent with this finding, we confirm by reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction that Li gene expression is absent in plants lacking enzyme activity. In a molecular population genetic analysis of Li and three unlinked genes using a worldwide sample of clover plants, we find an absence of nucleotide variation and statistically significant deviations from neutrality at Li; these findings are consistent with recent positive directional selection at this cyanogenesis locus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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8. Grazing behaviour of merinos on an undeveloped semi-arid tussock grassland block.
- Author
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Scott, D. and Sutherland, B. L.
- Published
- 1981
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9. ChemInform Abstract: REACTIONS OF ETHYLENE OXIDES PART 6, THE MECHANISM OF FORMATION OF DIOXOLANS FROM ACETONE AND 6‐T‐BUTYL‐1‐OXASPIRO(2,5)OCTANES
- Author
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COXON, J. M., primary, HARTSHORN, M. P., additional, and SUTHERLAND, B. L. S., additional
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
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10. Animal safety of a tall fescue endophyte ( Epichloë sp.) in a perennial ryegrass ( Lolium perenne ) host.
- Author
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Croy RG, Sutherland BL, Hume DE, Mace WJ, van Koten C, and Finch SC
- Subjects
- Animal Feed analysis, Animals, Endophytes metabolism, Sheep, Epichloe, Lolium, Sheep Diseases chemically induced
- Abstract
Aims: To assess animal health and production in sheep grazing perennial ryegrass ( Lolium perenne ) infected with a tall fescue endophyte ( Epichloë sp.)., Methods: Three replicates of pure perennial ryegrass pastures infected with AR501 tall fescue endophyte (AR501 HE), AR1, AR37 or standard endophyte (STD) (all >85% infection) and a low endophyte control (AR501 LE) were grazed by 10 lambs for 7 weeks during late summer/early autumn, 2017. AR501 HE and AR501 LE were in the same tetraploid cultivar and the remaining treatments were in the same diploid cultivar. Lambs were weighed on Days 0, 19, 37 and 48 and assessed for ryegrass staggers on a 0-4 tremor scale nine times from Day 13. On Days 14 and 20, rectal temperatures and respiration rates were measured in lambs grazing AR501 HE, AR501 LE and STD under heat load. Pasture samples from each treatment were taken regularly (8 times) for analysis of known endophyte secondary metabolites., Results: Peak mean ryegrass staggers scores for lambs grazing STD and AR37 treatments were 3.9 and 2.7, respectively, indicating environmental conditions were conducive to toxicity. Lambs grazing AR501 HE showed no ryegrass staggers at any date. The liveweight of STD lambs was up to 6.6 kg less than some or all other treatments on Days 19, 34 and 48, but there was no evidence of a difference between the liveweight of AR501 HE lambs and AR501 LE, AR37 or AR1 lambs on any date. Rectal temperatures and respiration rates of STD lambs were higher than AR501 HE lambs by 0.2°C and 26 breaths/minute, respectively. Apart from lower rectal temperature of AR501 HE lambs on Day 14, there was no evidence of differences between the AR501 HE and AR501 LE lambs. N -Formylloline was the only loline present in AR501 HE herbage (350-860 mg/kg). Peramine in AR501 HE herbage (42-77 mg/kg) was greater than that in STD and AR1 herbage on five and seven of the eight sampling dates, respectively., Conclusion: Lambs grazing AR501 HE showed no ryegrass staggers, exacerbated heat stress or suppressed liveweight gain compared with lambs grazing AR501 LE in a season when endophyte-induced toxicity was evident in STD and AR37 pastures. This suggests AR501 tall fescue endophyte does not produce toxic concentrations of secondary metabolites., Clinical Relevance: This study suggests that there are no secondary metabolites produced by the tall fescue AR501 endophyte-perennial ryegrass association which affect animal health or production.
- Published
- 2022
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11. Ergovaline does not alter the severity of ryegrass staggers induced by lolitrem B.
- Author
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Finch SC, Vlaming JB, Sutherland BL, van Koten C, Mace WJ, and Fletcher LR
- Subjects
- Animal Feed adverse effects, Animal Feed analysis, Animal Feed microbiology, Animals, Endophytes, Incidence, New Zealand epidemiology, Proportional Hazards Models, Severity of Illness Index, Sheep, Tremor chemically induced, Tremor epidemiology, Ergotamines analysis, Indole Alkaloids analysis, Lolium microbiology, Mycotoxins analysis, Sheep Diseases chemically induced, Sheep Diseases epidemiology, Tremor veterinary
- Abstract
Aim: To investigate a possible interaction between lolitrem B and ergovaline by comparing the incidence and severity of ryegrass staggers in sheep grazing ryegrass (Lolium perenne) containing lolitrem B or ryegrass containing both lolitrem B and ergovaline., Methods: Ninety lambs, aged approximately 6 months, were grazed on plots of perennial ryegrass infected with either AR98 endophyte (containing lolitrem B), standard endophyte (containing lolitrem B and ergovaline) or no endophyte, for up to 42 days from 2 February 2010. Ten lambs were grazed on three replicate plots per cultivar. Herbage samples were collected for alkaloid analysis and lambs were scored for ryegrass staggers (scores from 0-5) weekly during the study. Any animal which was scored ≥4 was removed from the study., Results: Concentrations of lolitrem B did not differ between AR98 and standard endophyte-infected pastures during the study period (p=0.26), and ergovaline was present only in standard endophyte pastures. Ryegrass staggers was observed in sheep grazing both the AR98 and standard endophyte plots, with median scores increasing in the third week of the study. Prior to the end of the 42-day grazing period, 22 and 17 animals were removed from the standard endophyte and AR98 plots, respectively, because their staggers scores were ≥4. The cumulative probability of lambs having scores ≥4 did not differ between animals grazing the two pasture types (p=0.41)., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: There was no evidence for ergovaline increasing the severity of ryegrass staggers induced by lolitrem B. In situations where the severity of ryegrass staggers appears to be greater than that predicted on the basis of concentrations of lolitrem B, the presence of other tremorgenic alkaloids should be investigated.
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- 2018
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12. Further investigation of equine fescue oedema induced by Mediterranean tall fescue (Lolium arundinaceum) infected with selected fungal endophytes (Epichloë coenophiala).
- Author
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Finch SC, Munday JS, Sutherland BL, Vlaming JB, and Fletcher LR
- Subjects
- Animals, Edema etiology, Endophytes, Food Contamination, Horses, Animal Feed microbiology, Edema veterinary, Epichloe growth & development, Horse Diseases etiology, Lolium microbiology
- Abstract
AIMS To determine if equine fescue oedema (EFO) induced by grazing Mediterranean-type tall fescue (Lolium arundinaceum) infected with selected endophytes (Epichloë coenophiala) could be prevented by treatment with the corticosteroid, methylprednisolone, and anti-histamine, cetirizine, and to determine concentrations of lolines, specifically N-acetyl norloline (NANL), in grasses grazed by horses that did and did not develop EFO. METHODS Four horses were grazed on AR542-infected Mediterranean tall fescue pasture (from Day 0) for 7 days prior to being subjected to euthanasia. Two of these horses were treated with 250 mg methylprednisolone and 300 mg cetirizine hydrochloride every 12 hours orally from Days 0-7. Two more horses grazed meadow fescue (Festuca pratensis) infected with the naturally-occurring, common endophyte (Epichloë uncinata) for 21 days before euthanasia. All horses were observed closely for signs of EFO, and blood samples were taken daily for measurement of concentrations of total protein (TP) in serum. Following euthanasia post-mortem examinations were conducted on all horses. Pasture samples of meadow fescue and Mediterranean tall fescue from the current study, and endophyte-infected Mediterranean tall fescue from a previous study that were associated with EFO, were analysed for concentrations of lolines using gas chromatography. RESULTS By Day 7, the treated and untreated horses grazing AR542-infected Mediterranean tall fescue all developed signs of EFO, and concentrations of TP in serum of all horses were <45 g/L. No signs of EFO were observed in horses grazing meadow fescue and concentrations of TP remained above 60 g/L. Necropsy showed marked oedema and eosinophilic inflammation in the intestines of all horses grazing Mediterranean tall fescue. In the sample of meadow fescue, concentrations of total lolines and N-acetyl norloline (NANL) were 2,402 and 543 mg/kg, respectively. In the three samples of Mediterranean tall fescue associated with EFO, concentrations of total lolines were 308, 629 and 679 mg/kg, and concentrations of NANL were 308, 614 and 305 mg/kg. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE In horses grazing Mediterranean tall fescue infected with the AR542 endophyte, treatment with methylprednisolone and cetirizine did not prevent development of EFO. Results of pasture analysis indicated that lolines or NANL are unlikely to be the causative agent of this disease.
- Published
- 2017
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13. The occurrence of ryegrass staggers and heat stress in sheep grazing ryegrass-endophyte associations with diverse alkaloid profiles.
- Author
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Fletcher LR, Finch SC, Sutherland BL, deNicolo G, Mace WJ, van Koten C, and Hume DE
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Temperature, Hot Temperature, Stress, Physiological, Animal Feed, Endophytes metabolism, Lolium microbiology, Sheep growth & development, Sheep Diseases chemically induced
- Abstract
Aims: To compare ryegrass pastures infected with endophytes producing diverse alkaloids for their ability to cause ryegrass staggers in grazing lambs; to compare respiration rates and rectal temperatures of these lambs after exposure to heat stress, and to compare liveweight gains during the study period., Methods: Ryegrass pastures of cultivar Trojan infected with NEA endophytes, branded NEA2 (T-NEA2), endophyte-free Trojan (T-NIL), Samson infected with standard endophyte (S-STD), Samson infected with AR37 endophyte (S-AR37) and endophyte-free Samson (S-NIL), were grazed by lambs (n=30 per cultivar) for up to 48 days in February and March of 2012 and 2013. Pasture samples were analysed for alkaloid concentrations and lambs were scored for ryegrass staggers at intervals during the study period. Liveweight was recorded at the start (Day 0) and end of the study, and rectal temperatures and respiratory rates were measured in lambs exposed to heat stress on Days 23 and 26, in 2012 and 2013, respectively., Results: Concentrations of alkaloids were lower in 2012 than 2013, associated with warmer and drier conditions in 2013, and the prevalence of ryegrass staggers was low in 2012. In 2013, concentrations of ergovaline were similar in T-NEA2 and S-STD, but concentrations of lolitrem B were lower in T-NEA2 than S-STD. S-AR37 produced epoxy-janthitrems but no lolitrem B or ergovaline. In 2013, by Day 20, 9/30 (30%) sheep grazing S-STD had severe staggers (score ≥4), and by Day 47 all sheep had been removed from this cultivar due to severe staggers. By Day 47, 18/30 (60%), 4/30 (13%) and 0/30 (0%) sheep grazing S-AR37, T-NEA2 and T-NIL pastures, respectively, had severe staggers. There were no differences in mean daily weight gain of lambs between cultivars in either year. In both years, mean rectal temperature and respiration rate following exposure to heat stress were highest in sheep grazing S-STD and T-NEA2, and lowest in sheep grazing T-NIL., Conclusions: In lambs grazing different ryegrass pastures infected with endophytes, ryegrass staggers was most severe on S-STD, less severe on S-AR37 and least on T-NEA2. When under heat stress, lambs grazing ergovaline-producing S-STD and T-NEA2 pastures had increased respiration rates and rectal temperatures compared with lambs grazing T-NIL., Clinical Relevance: If ambient temperatures are suitable, NEA2-branded endophytes have the potential to express concentrations of ergovaline sufficient to induce heat stress in grazing sheep.
- Published
- 2017
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14. Pathological changes seen in horses in New Zealand grazing Mediterranean tall fescue (Lolium arundinaceum) infected with selected endophytes (Epichloë coenophiala) causing equine fescue oedema.
- Author
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Munday JS, Finch SC, Vlaming JB, Sutherland BL, and Fletcher LR
- Subjects
- Animals, Horse Diseases pathology, Horses, Animal Feed microbiology, Food Microbiology, Horse Diseases chemically induced, Lolium microbiology, Mycotoxins toxicity, Neotyphodium metabolism
- Abstract
Aim: To investigate whether Mediterranean tall fescue (Lolium arundinaceum (Schreb.) Darbysh. (syn Festuca arundinacea)) infected with selected fungal endophytes (Epichloë coenophiala (formerly Neotyphodium coenophialum)) caused equine fescue oedema when grown in New Zealand, and to examine the pathological changes associated with this intoxication., Methods: Horses were grazed on Mediterranean tall fescue that was infected with the endophytes AR542 (n=2), or AR584 (n=3), or Mediterranean tall fescue that was endophyte-free (n=2). Blood samples were taken up to 7 days after the start of feeding to detect changes in concentrations of total protein in serum and packed cell volume. Any horse showing clinical evidence of disease was subject to euthanasia and necropsy., Results: Within 6 days, both horses grazing fescue infected with AR542 became depressed and lethargic. One horse grazing fescue infected with endophyte AR584 became depressed within a 5-day feeding period while another horse in this group died shortly after being removed from the AR584 pasture. The third horse in this group did not develop clinical signs within the 5-day feeding period. However, haemoconcentration and hypoproteinaemia was detected in all horses grazing Mediterranean tall fescue that was infected by AR542 or AR584 endophyte. No abnormalities were observed in horses grazing fescue that was endophyte-free. Necropsy examination was performed on two horses grazing fescue infected with AR542 and one horse grazing fescue infected with AR584. All three horses had marked oedema of the gastrointestinal tract. Histologically, the oedema was accompanied by large numbers of eosinophils, but no necrosis., Conclusions: Horses grazing Mediterranean tall fescue that was infected by AR542 or AR584 developed hypoproteinaemia and haemoconcentration, most likely due to leakage of plasma proteins into the gastrointestinal tract. This suggests that these selected endophytes produce a compound that is toxic to horses, although the toxic principle is currently unknown., Clinical Relevance: Mediterranean tall fescue that is infected by AR542 or AR584 should not be fed to horses in New Zealand. This intoxication should be considered in horses in which a rapid onset of hypoproteinaemia and haemoconcentration is detected. This intoxication should also be considered if marked gastrointestinal oedema is observed.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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