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Dr. Kenneth W. Hinchcliff
BVSc (Hons, University of Melbourne), MS (University of Wisconsin-Madison); PhD (The Ohio State University); Diplomate
of the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine.
Director, Exercise Physiology Laboratory, College of
Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University. Professor,
College of Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University.
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Ed Kane, Ph.D.
Senior Nutritionist
Stuart Products Inc.
Ed Kane is currently Senior Nutritionist for Stuart Products, Inc. suppliers of natural antioxidant nutrients and nutrition supplements to the horse, food producing, exotic animal, and pet industries, 2001-present.
He is also a consultant to the pet food industry.
Ph.D., Animal Nutrition and Physiology (equine energy metabolism, ovine energy metabolism), University of Kentucky, Lexington KY, 1978.
M. S., Animal Physiology (poultry temperature regulation), West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, 1974.
B.S., Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 1968.
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Laurie Lawrence, Ph.D.
Professor
Department of Animal Sciences
University of Kentucky
Laurie Lawrence is a professor in the Department of Animal Sciences at the University of Kentucky where she is active in equine nutrition research and teaching. Her research interests include the interaction between nutrition and performance, the nutrient requirements of broodmares and the optimization of forage use in equine diets. She has advised more than two dozen graduate students and she is the author of more than 60 refereed publications and over 100 abstracts, proceedings papers and popular press articles. She is a past-president of the Equine Nutrition and Physiology Society and a past director of the American Society of Animal Science. In 1998 she received the AFIA Award for research in nonruminant nutrition. She has also received the Distinguished Service Award from the Equine Nutrition and Physiology Society, the Great Teacher Award from the University of Kentucky and the Thomas Poe Cooper Award for research in the College of Agriculture at the University of Kentucky. She is currently chairing the National Research Council committee to revise the Nutrient Requirements of Horses.
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Dawn B. Logas,
D.V.M.
Diplomate, American College of Veterinary Dermatology
University of Florida, 1986
Dr. Logas completed a residency in veterinary dermatology at the
University of Florida in 1992 and is an active Diplomate of the
American College of Veterinary Dermatology. She has practiced in
the Orlando area since 1993.
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Cindy McCall, Ph.D.
Extension Horse Specialist
Department of Animal Sciences
Cindy McCall received a B.S. in Agriculture from the University of Tennessee and a M.S. and Ph.D. in Animal Science from Texas A & M University. Her major research interest is equine behavior with an emphasis on factors affecting equine learning abilities. Recently her research work has expanded into investigating stereotypical behaviors in horses, such as crib-biting, and possible links between these behaviors and the nutrition and physiology of the horse. She is a professor at Auburn University Department of Animal Sciences where she teaches their equine science courses and serves as extension horse specialist for Alabama.
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Craig R. Reinemeyer, DVM, PhD
President, East Tennessee Clinical Research, Inc.
Dr. Reinemeyer is a 1976 graduate of The Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine. After 5 years in a mixed animal practice in Kent, Ohio, he returned to OSU and earned a PhD in veterinary parasitology in 1984. Dr. Reinemeyer was a faculty member of the University of Tennessee College of Veterinary Medicine from 1984 to 1998, and currently is president of East Tennessee Clinical Research, Inc. in Knoxville, TN. His major research interests are clinical development of veterinary pharmaceuticals and strategic control of internal parasites of grazing animals.
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