Browsing by Author "Rittenhouse, Larry R., advisor"
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Item Open Access Self-medication in horses(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2008) Williams, David Earl, author; Rittenhouse, Larry R., advisor; Norris, Brian J., advisorHorses are known herbivore generalists that must rely upon available plant forage for dietary needs. Diet selection in rangeland herbivores has been shown to be based upon post-ingestive physiological consequences. The basic premise of post-ingestive physiological consequences is the ability of an animal to associate the taste of a particular food with its possible hedonic shift. A negative hedonic shift results in the animal to avoid the taste in future encounters, while a positive hedonic shift results in the animal to seek the taste in future encounters. Thus, taste determines the palatability of plant forages thereby leading to an animal's ability to form a preference for food. Many available plants consumed by horses in natural habitats are known to contain secondary compounds referred to as toxins and all toxins are known to be drugs. Locoweed contains the toxin swainsonine and is known to cause the neurological condition described as locoism in large continuous doses. However, recent studies have shown that swainsonine has medicinal affects in humans and animals. The current study tested four chronically lame horses to examine their ability to form an association of a flavor, either carrots or apples, with a possible post-ingestive physiological consequence induced by a drug. There were two drugs utilized in this study; locoweed that contained swainsonine, and butorphanol tartrate a synthetic opiate analgesic (brand name Torbugesic). The horses were divided into two groups and each group was assigned a respective drug throughout the duration of two separate trials. The first trial associated a flavor with each group's respective drug treatment and the second trial involved the reversal of flavors while holding the drug treatments constant for each group. Each trial involved a conditioning period followed by test days when horses were challenged to make a decision between the treatment associated flavor or the non-treatment associated flavor. The horses were then challenged with the drugs returned to flavored feeds. The results suggest that horses do have the ability to associate a taste with a post-ingestive consequence induced by a drug. This suggestion gives insight into the horse's possible capability of self-medication.Item Open Access Validation of a geographic information system predictive habitat model for burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) at US Army, Dugway Proving Ground(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2009) White, Boyd Winston, author; Rittenhouse, Larry R., advisor; Bunnell, Kevin D., advisor; Woodmansee, Robert George, committee member; Peel, R. Kraig, committee memberThis study was designed to validate the use of Geological Information Systems (GIS) for creating a predictive habitat model that produces raster maps of acceptable habitats for Burrowing Owls, Athene cunicularia (ATCU). The model was designed to locate ATCU habitat for long-term monitoring purposes at U.S. Army Dugway Proving Ground. ArcGIS 9 was used to manipulate data from three data layers: Southwest Regional Gap Analysis vegetation layer, slope data, and proximity to edge. A weighted index was assigned to individual pixels. The weighted index was a product of the weighting factors (0.45, 0.35, and 0.25 for vegetation types, slope and proximity, respectively times the index (3, 2, 1, 0 for excellent, fair, poor and non-habitat, respectively). The display layer was the sum of the weighted layers. The display was Excellent, Fair, Poor and Non- Habitat. Visual and auditory field observations were conducted in each of the four habitat delineations to validate the models predictive capability. In conclusion, we could not discriminate Excellent, Fair, Poor, or Non-habitat, based on the two proportions test and the Z-statistic at the 80% Confidence Interval. Validation was hampered by the low incidence of ATCU sightings in the 2008 season.