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Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004

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Page 1: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Horse Behavior

Moira IlgERS 69713-April-2004

Page 2: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Outline Introduction and General

Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior Grazing Behavior Conclusions and Possible

Implications

Page 3: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

General Background Factors that influence dominance

relationships Body size Physical condition Age

• Older the more dominant Sex Previous agonistic encounters Group size Dominance hierarchy of parents

Page 4: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Background continued Band structure

Single adult male Adult females and their offspring Normally stable

• Changes are normally juvenile males and females Juvenile males may remain solitary for months

or years Juvenile females normally bands

A well defined hierarchy is present during grazing and will persist if they are provided with food

Page 5: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

General Background Behaviors

Threatening Behavior

• Maybe widespread or may have a few favorites to pick on

• Is often one sided• If there is a

“winner”, they move up in rank

Page 6: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Behaviors

Grooming•Normally

groom with two or three individuals that are similar in rank and age

Page 7: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Behaviors continued Play

• Important for social development of young

• Most common within in peer groups

Submissive• Often a response to

threatening behavior

Page 8: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Social Status or Ranking Top ranking individual

Large number of threats • Distributed widely across the herd• Often don’t have “friends”

Stallion • Is often times the only breeding male

Mare• Often decreases aggressions as rank

becomes higher

Page 9: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Social Status or Ranking Friends

• Normally close in age and social status• Mares may bond more closely with those

that are related to them• It is important account for “friendships”

when assessing the distribution of threats

Page 10: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Social Status or Ranking Tend to be selective about who they

interact with Animals tend to spend the most time near

individuals that have the same rank or age or both

Top ranking animals are seldom seen alone or in a small group Elders are less social than the young

• Often have fewer interactions with younger subordinate mares

Page 11: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Social Status or Ranking May recognize individuals that they

have competed with Leading to fewer competitions in older

animals

Page 12: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Theories of the evolution of bonds Evolved between mares and stallion

in a band because of pressure from predators that hunted cooperatively

Protect mares against harassment from other stallions and reduce inter-mare aggression

Page 13: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Mares Acts of aggression

is most common with mares that do not have foals

The least amount of aggression is seen between mares that have foals Protection of foals

Page 14: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Mares Intermediate aggression is seen

between mares that have foals and those that do not

Young mares are much more aggressive than older mares when foals were less than a week old

Page 15: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Mares continued Older mares have fewer encounters

of aggression• Number of acts of aggression decrease as the

mare becomes older

Aggression frequencies increase in May (foaling season)

Frequencies of aggression increase significantly the closer the mare is to parturition

Page 16: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

The Advantage of Being A Dominant Mare Receive less aggression Access to shade on hot sunny or rainy days to

rest Increased access to feed Supermare May suppress conception, induce abortions, or

harass or kill offspring of subordinate mares However, dominant mares may not live as long

They have increased amount of stress and a increased amount of cortisol

Page 17: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

The Disadvantages of Being A Subordinate Mare Increased acts of aggression Denied access to shady areas Give birth to fewer or less fit foals Denied access to food

Decreased growth rate

Page 18: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Foals Foals will often

play with foals of their dam’s friends

Also like to associate with foals of the same gender

Page 19: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Foals In the case of fillies they most often will

have a similar rank to their dam• Dams may assist their foals in agonistic

encounters• Foal-mare association• Genetics

Page 20: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Stallion Behavior Some bands will have multiple

stallions The subordinate stallions are more

likely to help defend the band than the dominant stallion

However these stallions are forced to stay on the periphery of the group by the dominant stallion

Page 21: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Grazing Behavior The time spent grazing is dependent on the

intake of the grazer Daily intake is determined by

Time spent foraging• Varies from a few minutes to 13hrs and 25 min

Bite rate Bite size

Are selective when quantity and quality of forage is high When drops below a threshold level they

become less selective

Page 22: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Grazing Behavior Foraging time increases for mares in

the summer months Major feeding bouts after dawn and

before dusk Feed mainly during the day except

for summer months when there is a midday lull

Page 23: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Grazing Behavior Often forage from plant communities

that are continuous with patches of more desirable plants

May use spatial memory to find those plants that are the most desirable

Study by Edwards et al., 1996

Page 24: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Grazing Behavior Most large herbivores rest in the

areas that they graze Some herds have been shown to travel

over 1 kilometer to high ground, saltflats with low plant cover, or denuded vegetation

Yet when they arrive they show signs of extreme discomfort

Page 25: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Grazing Behavior So why travel all that distance?

Higher altitude cooler temps?• Unlikely, cooler temps are more likely to be

found in shady areas rather than bare ground

Fewer biting flies?• Probably, though the reasons are unclear• Most likely the flat, open areas are poor

habitat for biting flies

Page 26: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Grazing Behavior Is it really worth the effort?

They can lose up to 500cc of blood to biting flies a day

Biting flies are also the carriers of disease

• Anthrax• Lethal arbovirsues

Horses actually spend less energy in the comfort movements

Page 27: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Grazing Preferences Preferences

Prefer gentler slopes

Mesic grasslands Avoid

Steep slopes Drier grasslands Large tracks of

forests

Page 28: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Home Range Home range varies in size in relation to

the band size Home ranges overlap Groups can move seasonally Home range cores become larger during

winter months than in summer months Change elevations for foaling and mating

Page 29: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Methods Focal animal Focal groups

Page 30: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Problems In feral herds it is often times

difficult to identify individuals Identify distinctive individuals

• Markings• Colorations• Sex • Location

Counting by helicopter

Page 31: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Conclusion Horses are for the most part herd

animals and they move as a herd, but can be influenced by individualistic behaviors

There are reasons and patterns in their movements that can be predicted when their behavior is understood

Page 32: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

Possible Implications Understanding behavior can allow

Better prediction of movements Understanding habitat choice Better herd management

Page 33: Horse Behavior Moira Ilg ERS 697 13-April-2004. Outline Introduction and General Background Social Status or Ranking Foal and Mare Behavior Stallion Behavior

QuestionsQuestions?