Study analyzes buyers' assumptions about carpal chips in Thoroughbred yearlings
See the vet reports during any yearling sale and you'll hear it—a ripple of concern when a veterinarian flags a bone chip on a radiograph of the horse's leg. Buyers often step away. Prices drop. The horse, in the minds of many, is already compromised. However, findings of a study from the University of Kentucky Maxwell H. Gluck Equine Research Center challenge that assumption, which carries real financial weight for sellers and consignors.
More From This Topic
View Topic
How Japan Could Co-Produce the Navy’s Future Fleet
America’s defense industrial base cannot build the Navy out of the threat it faces. Decades of …
Persistent heavy downpours expected to ease for Hong Kong’s Tuen Ng Festival
来源:South China Morning Post · 作者:Lam Ka-sing · Thu, 18 Ju· 分类:AsiaHong Kong has been hit by more hea …
BOJ will hike rates again by December, 90% of economists say
来源:Japan Times · 作者:Editorial · Thu, 18 Ju· 分类:AsiaA key question is whether or not the BOJ needs to …
Africa: When Coral Reefs Die, Coastal Communities Pay the Price
来源:AllAfrica · 作者:[email protected] (allAfrica) · Wed, 17 Ju· 分类:Africa[allAfrica] Mombasa, Kenya - …
Trump formally signs U.S.-Iran deal as questions linger about nuclear program
President Trump warned he could order new strikes if Iran's leaders "don't behave." The U.S. and Ira …
Malaysia's Genting plans $20bn smart city in Johor-Singapore special zone
来源:Nikkei Asia · 作者:Editorial · 2026-06-18· 分类:AsiaMalaysia's Genting plans $20bn smart city in Joho …