Rutgers University
EQUINE SCIENCE QUARTERLY
From Our Stable To Yours
Winter 2020
Inside the Issue:
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From The Lab: Horse Management Seminar Preview
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Evening Of Science & Celebration
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Equine Science Center Hosts NJAEP Wet Lab
Equine Science 4 Kids!: New Activity Book To Debut At Junior Breeders Livestock Symposium
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here is never really a âquietâ time of the year for the Equine Science Center. When not doing field research, there is lab work. When not doing lab work, there are papers to write. And when not writing papers, there are community events to attend and seminars to host. Ph. D. candidate Jennifer Weinert is researching integrated rotational grazing systems for horses that combine traditional cool season grasses with novel warm season grasses; Ph. D. student Ellen Rankins is researching the human-horse bond, especially as it pertains to the horses and humans that participate in equine assisted activities and therapies (EAAT); and state veterinary epidemiologist Dr. Leslie Seraphin recently lectured on the importance of equine biosecurityâ how to prevent and control the spread of diseasesâand gave a biosecurity tour of the Cook Animal Farm.
While research and lectures to students play a huge part in what the Equine Science Center does, the Center is equally dedicated to educating the public. This is accomplished through events like the Horse Management Seminar and annual Equine Science Center Stakeholder Meeting, as well as through publications like âResearch Updatesâ and the Centerâs annual report. These events and publications bring the research conducted at the Center to a user-friendly medium, and insures that information learned by conducting the research doesnât just get put on a shelf, and is actually distributed to constituents. âBut what about the constituents who are younger, the ones who might just be entering 4-H or are interested in horses but donât know where to go,â said Kyle Hartmann, Public Relations Specialist at the Equine Continued on pg. 4