terça-feira, 13 de janeiro de 2015

An animal that is a roarer should not be used for breeding purposes

An animal that is a roarer should not be used for breeding purposes

An animal that is a roarer should not be used for breeding purposes



An animal that is a roarer should not be used for breeding purposes. The taint is transmissible in many instances.

Grunting. A common test used by veterinarians when examining "the wind" of a horse is to see if he is a "grunter." This is a sound emitted during expiration when the animal is suddenly moved, or startled, or struck at. If he grunts he is further tested for roaring. Grunters are not always roarers, but, as it is a common thing for a roarer to grunt, such an animal must be looked upon with suspicion until he is thoroughly tried by pulling a load or galloped up a hill. The test should be a severe one. Horses suffering with pleurisy, pleurodynia, or rheumatism, and other affections accompanied with much pain, will grunt when moved, or when the pain is aggravated, but grunting under these circumstances does not justify the term of "grunter" being applied to the horse, as the grunting ceases when the animal recovers from the disease that causes the pain.


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