PurBee
Well-Known Member
The ratios between the minerals is what we usually work from. Depending on the testing facility, depends what their ‘normal’ means - is that normal values for grassland (which normally is imbalanced pertaining to equine ratio needs) or is it a specific for equine grass test showing ratio results to be ‘normal’ i.e good ratios for equines?My grass analysis shows all major elements normal except low in sodium; all trace elements are low except selenium which is normal. Antagonists aluminium and lead very low but molybdenum very high; copper low. Does that profile ring any alarm bells? They get fed a lo-cal balancer but only about a third of what the retailer recommends the horses are about the right weight and I want them to stay that way!
As birker has posted, the molybdenum is showing as an issue, but if it was that causing acute ataxia in 1, then we’d usually expect to see symptoms in all the herd grazing the same grass, irrespective of age.
Also as the yearling has recovered quickly, and has remained bouncy! …and continued grazing that land with the others, suggests some other cause than grass mineral toxicity, which would take a while for the system to flush out if the cause was that even with the yearling removed from the field.
Yet that does want to be addressed by balancing the micro ratio's. If yours get mud fever, hair coat bleaching, then copper/zinc addition helps. It depends on the balancer youre giving, if that is balancing out the high molybdenum enough at a third of a dose. If you get the above winter/coat issues then increase copper intake in them.
Out of interest - do you spread manure on your grass or fertilise in any way?
If you have a reasonable % of clover in your grassland youre likely to have higher molybdenum levels.
If you’ve spread lime raising the soil ph above 6.2, that will increase molybdenum uptake in grass.
Aerating soil will decrease molybdenum levels.
All the ‘nasty’ micro minerals increase due to soil compaction from grazing/machinery/rainfall etc. aerating soil helps.
This pdf is a useful article on the basics of balancing soils/grassland:
You can balance it orally now by giving the horses a good micro mineral mix, especially copper, for immediate correction of the high molybdenum in the grass.
If molybdenum toxicity/severe copper deficiency caused the ataxia, that only is plausible if the yearling grazes a certain area of the field ‘obsessively’ the others dont. It may be a bottom corner of a sloping field - you always see him grazing there. Rainfall would wash most minerals down and potentially cause concentration in lower soils. If you know he’s always grazing in one section moreso than anywhere else, and the others graze allover, that could signify a grass intake different to the others.
But him recovering so quickly, doesnt point to long-standing mineral toxicity/deficiency, which takes more than 1 day to correct when theyve become symptomatic.