NORMAL AND MORE HIGHLY REACTIVE HORSES .1. HEART-RATE, RESPIRATION RATE AND BEHAVIORAL OBSERVATIONS Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Thirty-two Quarter horse yearlings were utilized in a split-plot experiment to establish behavioral tendencies for two levels of emotionality; normal and a more highly reactive level of emotionality termed nervous. Four observers who were experienced with horses scored the yearlings on an emotionality scale from 1 to 4, with 1 representing the highly nervous yearlings and 4 representing the quiet yearlings. Emotionality evaluations were based upon the response of the yearlings to a standard regimen of standing in a chute, being identified and being released from the chute. The inter-rater reliability coefficients were 0.90 for the normal yearlings and 0.65 for the nervous yearlings, indicating that the raters agreed less when evaluating the nervous yearlings. Yearling heart rates in the chute were correlated (r = -0.54, P<0.002) with the average emotionality score. Observational data on behavior collected 2 days following the emotionality scoring procedure indicated that the normal yearlings maintained a greater (P<0.001) individual distance than the nervous yearlings. From an activity summary, the normal yearlings spent 10.9% of the time lying down (LD), 79.1% standing (S), 9.6% walking or trotting (WT) and 0.4% of the time cantering or galloping (CG). The nervous yearlings spent 5.7% of the observational periods LD, 79.2% S, 11.7% WT and 3.4% CG. The nervous yearlings tended to have a higher overall activity index level than did the normal yearlings. Results indicate horses of different emotionality levels exhibited different behavioral patterns. 1988.

published proceedings

  • APPLIED ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR SCIENCE

author list (cited authors)

  • MCCANN, J. S., HEIRD, J. C., BELL, R. W., & LUTHERER, L. O.

citation count

  • 50

complete list of authors

  • MCCANN, JS||HEIRD, JC||BELL, RW||LUTHERER, LO

publication date

  • January 1988