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Topic:Feral Horses

Feral horses, also known as free-roaming or wild horses, are equines that live in natural environments without direct human management. They are descendants of domesticated horses that have adapted to living in the wild over generations. These populations are found in various regions worldwide and exhibit behaviors and social structures distinct from domesticated horses. In contrast, domesticated horses are bred and raised under human care, often for specific purposes such as work, recreation, or sport. The study of feral horses involves understanding their ecology, behavior, and genetics, while research on domesticated horses often focuses on health, management, and performance. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the differences and similarities between feral and domesticated horses, including their behavior, physiology, and impact on ecosystems.
Testing VHF/GPS collar design and safety in the study of free-roaming horses.
PloS one    September 8, 2014   Volume 9, Issue 9 e103189 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0103189
Collins GH, Petersen SL, Carr CA, Pielstick L.Effective and safe monitoring techniques are needed by U.S. land managers to understand free-roaming horse behavior and habitat use and to aid in making informed management decisions. Global positioning system (GPS) and very high frequency (VHF) radio collars can be used to provide high spatial and temporal resolution information for detecting free-roaming horse movement. GPS and VHF collars are a common tool used in wildlife management, but have rarely been used for free-roaming horse research and monitoring in the United States. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the design, safety, a...
Comparative analysis of LTR and structural genes in an equine infectious anemia virus strain isolated from a feral horse in Japan.
Archives of virology    August 23, 2014   Volume 159, Issue 12 3413-3420 doi: 10.1007/s00705-014-2206-0
Dong J, Cook FR, Haga T, Horii Y, Norimine J, Misawa N, Goto Y, Zhu W.Although equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) poses a major threat to the equine industry worldwide, the molecular epidemiology of this virus is poorly understood. Recently, an EIAV strain (EIAVMiyazaki2011-A) representing a new monophyletic group was discovered in feral horses in southern Japan. In the present study, the EIAVMiyazaki2011-A proviral genome is compared with evolutionarily divergent EIAV isolates to investigate conservation of functional elements or motifs within the long terminal repeats (LTRs) and structural genes. This analysis represents a significant step forward in increa...
Is the left forelimb preference indicative of a stressful situation in horses?
Behavioural processes    August 7, 2014   Volume 107 61-67 doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2014.07.018
Siniscalchi M, Padalino B, Lusito R, Quaranta A.Evidence for behavioural and brain lateralisation is now widespread among the animal kingdom; lateralisation of limb use (pawedness) occurs in several mammals including both feral and domestic horses. We investigated limb preferences in 14 Quarter Horse during different motor tasks (walking, stepping on and off a step, truck loading and unloading). Population lateralisation was observed in two tasks: horses preferentially used their left forelimb during truck loading and stepping off a step. The results also revealed that horses showed higher scores for anxious behaviours during truck loading ...
The role of an alpha animal in changing environmental conditions.
Physiology & behavior    May 28, 2014   Volume 133 236-243 doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2014.05.025
Wolter R, Pantel N, Stefanski V, Möstl E, Krueger K.The maintenance and development of conservation areas by grazing of large herbivores, such as Przewalski's horses, is common practice. Several nature conservation areas house male bachelor groups of this species. When males are needed for breeding they are removed from the groups, often without considering group compositions and individual social positions. However, alpha animals are needed for ensuring group stability and decision making in potentially dangerous situations in several species. To investigate the role of the alpha male in a bachelor group, we observed the behaviour of five Prze...
Population dynamics of feral horses (Equus caballus) following above-average rainfall in a semi-arid environment of Australia.
Australian veterinary journal    February 28, 2014   Volume 91, Issue 11 482-487 doi: 10.1111/avj.12120
Kampmann S, Hampson BA, Pollitt CC.Recent record rainfall in much of semi-arid Central Australia is the most likely reason for a feral horse population increase in excess of normal. Uncontrolled numbers of feral horses have habitat degradation and animal welfare implications. Objective: The aims of this study were to investigate the social structure of feral horses and assess their population growth rate following unseasonably high rainfall. Methods: The study area was 4000 km(2) of unmanaged, semi-arid country in Central Australia (latitude 24.50°S, longitude 132.10°E). Horses were identified by descriptive features from g...
An economic model demonstrating the long-term cost benefits of incorporating fertility control into wild horse (Equus caballus) management programs on public lands in the United States.
Journal of zoo and wildlife medicine : official publication of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians    January 21, 2014   Volume 44, Issue 4 Suppl S34-S37 doi: 10.1638/1042-7260-44.4S.S34
de Seve CW, Griffin SL.In recent years, the Bureau of Land Management's (BLM) Wild Horse and Burro Management program costs have increased dramatically due to a rise in the number of animals removed from public lands coupled with significantly decreased adoption rates. To assist with development and implementation of effective, cost-containing management programs, a robust economic model to project the costs and optimize outcomes of various management scenarios was created. For example, preliminary demonstration model runs show that by gradually replacing "removal-only" programs with contraception-and-removal progra...
Long-term methods and effects of remotely treating wildlife with immunocontraception.
Journal of zoo and wildlife medicine : official publication of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians    January 21, 2014   Volume 44, Issue 4 Suppl S138-S140 doi: 10.1638/1042-7260-44.4S.S138
Naugle R, Grams K.The development of sophisticated delivery equipment, as well as safer and more effective drugs, has made remote delivery of animal drugs a standard and readily available tool for wildlife professionals, veterinarians, ranchers, and animal control officers. In the 1980s, researchers began treating a wide variety of wildlife with injectable porcine zona pellucida immunocontraceptive vaccines. Remote delivery of immunocontraceptives has been proven effective at the individual and population level for wild horses and urban deer. However, it took only a short time at each study site to understand t...
From the pens to the field: real-world wildlife contraception.
Journal of zoo and wildlife medicine : official publication of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians    January 21, 2014   Volume 44, Issue 4 Suppl S102-S110 doi: 10.1638/1042-7260-44.4S.S102
Turner JW, Rutberg AT.There are only two nonlethal approaches with which to manage wildlife populations: remove excess individuals or decrease reproductive rates. In the case of wild horse management, the latter has already been shown to be a more humane and less costly approach. Contraception has been known for many years to be effective in wild horses with regard to both fertility and population alteration. Field testing under real-world management situations is a critical aspect of wildlife contraception assessment. Field testing also requires documentation to justify eventual large-scale use of fertility contro...
A genome wide study of genetic adaptation to high altitude in feral Andean Horses of the páramo.
BMC evolutionary biology    December 17, 2013   Volume 13 273 doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-13-273
Hendrickson SL.Life at high altitude results in physiological and metabolic challenges that put strong evolutionary pressure on performance due to oxidative stress, UV radiation and other factors dependent on the natural history of the species. To look for genes involved in altitude adaptation in a large herbivore, this study explored genome differentiation between a feral population of Andean horses introduced by the Spanish in the 1500s to the high Andes and their Iberian breed relatives. Results: Using allelic genetic models and Fst analyses of ~50 K single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across the horse...
Motion camouflage induced by zebra stripes.
Zoology (Jena, Germany)    December 4, 2013   Volume 117, Issue 3 163-170 doi: 10.1016/j.zool.2013.10.004
How MJ, Zanker JM.The functional significance of the zebra coat stripe pattern is one of the oldest questions in evolutionary biology, having troubled scientists ever since Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace first disagreed on the subject. While different theories have been put forward to address this question, the idea that the stripes act to confuse or 'dazzle' observers remains one of the most plausible. However, the specific mechanisms by which this may operate have not been investigated in detail. In this paper, we investigate how motion of the zebra's high contrast stripes creates visual effects tha...
Linking social environment and stress physiology in feral mares (Equus caballus): group transfers elevate fecal cortisol levels.
General and comparative endocrinology    November 22, 2013   Volume 196 26-33 doi: 10.1016/j.ygcen.2013.11.012
Nuñez CM, Adelman JS, Smith J, Gesquiere LR, Rubenstein DI.Feral horses (Equus caballus) have a complex social structure, the stability of which is important to their overall health. Behavioral and demographic research has shown that decreases in group (or band) stability reduce female fitness, but the potential effects on the physiological stress response have not been demonstrated. To fully understand how band stability affects group-member fitness, we need to understand not only behavioral and demographic, but also physiological consequences of decreases to that stability. We studied group changes in feral mares (an activity that induces instabilit...
Movement initiation in groups of feral horses.
Behavioural processes    November 9, 2013   Volume 103 91-101 doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2013.10.007
Krueger K, Flauger B, Farmer K, Hemelrijk C.Herds of ungulates, flocks of birds, swarms of insects and schools of fish move in coordinated groups. Computer models show that only one or very few animals are needed to initiate and direct movement. To investigate initiation mechanisms further, we studied two ways in which movement can be initiated in feral horses: herding, and departure from the group. We examined traits affecting the likelihood of a horse initiating movement i.e. social rank, affiliative relationships, spatial position, and social network. We also investigated whether group members join a movement in dominance rank order....
Report criticizes management of wild horses: herds continue to grow at fast pace.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 26, 2013   Volume 243, Issue 4 465-466 
Larkin M.No abstract available
A free-ranging, feral mare equus caballus affords similar maternal care to her genetic and adopted offspring.
The American naturalist    September 5, 2013   Volume 182, Issue 5 674-681 doi: 10.1086/673214
Nuñez CM, Adelman JS, Rubenstein DI.Adoption of nongenetic offspring occurs in a variety of species but is rare in equids. We report a case of adoption by a free-ranging, feral mare Equus caballus and compare the maternal care received by her genetic offspring (born 1995) to that of her adopted offspring (born 1996) for the first 30 weeks of development. We compare five measures of care: (1) total time spent suckling, (2) mare aggression during suckling, (3) number of mare-terminated suckling bouts, (4) contact maintenance, and (5) mare-foal distance. For most behaviors, we detected no difference in the mare's treatment of the t...
Increasing density leads to generalization in both coarse-grained habitat selection and fine-grained resource selection in a large mammal.
The Journal of animal ecology    August 9, 2013   Volume 83, Issue 1 147-156 doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12115
van Beest FM, Uzal A, Vander Wal E, Laforge MP, Contasti AL, Colville D, McLoughlin PD.Density is a fundamental driver of many ecological processes including habitat selection. Theory on density-dependent habitat selection predicts that animals should be distributed relative to profitability of habitat, resulting in reduced specialization in selection (i.e. generalization) as density increases and competition intensifies. Despite mounting empirical support for density-dependent habitat selection using isodars to describe coarse-grained (interhabitat) animal movements, we know little of how density affects fine-grained resource selection of animals within habitats [e.g. using res...
Local density and group size interacts with age and sex to determine direction and rate of social dispersal in a polygynous mammal.
Ecology and evolution    August 1, 2013   Volume 3, Issue 9 3073-3082 doi: 10.1002/ece3.694
Marjamäki PH, Contasti AL, Coulson TN, McLoughlin PD.Movement away from an area or social group in response to increasing density (density-dependent dispersal) is known for most species; why it evolves is fundamental to our understanding of ecology and evolution. However, we have yet to fully appreciate how individuals of varying conditions (e.g., age and sex) might differently consider effects of density (quorum) when deciding to disperse or not, and scale dependence in their sense of quorum. We tracked movements of all individuals of a naturalized population of feral horses (Equus ferus caballus; Sable Island National Park Reserve, Nova Scotia...
Y-chromosome analysis in Retuertas horses.
PloS one    May 31, 2013   Volume 8, Issue 5 e64985 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0064985
Brandariz-Fontes C, Leonard JA, Vega-Pla JL, Backström N, Lindgren G, Lippold S, Rico C.Several studies based on a variety of genetic markers have attempted to establish the origins of horse domestication. Thus far a discrepancy between the results of mitochondrial DNA analysis, which show high levels of diversity, and results from the Y-chromosome, with almost no genetic variability, has been identified. Most previous work on the horse Y-chromosome has focused on widespread, popular breeds or local Asian breeds. It is possible that these breeds represent a reduced set of the genetic variation present in the species. Additional genetic variation may be present in local breeds and...
Removal experiments indicate that subordinate stallions are not helpers.
Behavioural processes    February 18, 2013   Volume 94 1-4 doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2013.02.005
Linklater WL, Cameron EZ, Stafford KJ, Minot EO.Relationships between males defending the same harem are described as cooperative or competitive and explained by mutualism, reciprocal altruism, and reproductive concessions or limited control between unequal contestants. These alternate hypotheses can be tested by removing males from harems. Some feral horse (Equus caballus) harems are defended by more than one and up to five stallions. We temporarily removed the subordinate stallion from two of six multi-stallion bands (a harem and its stallions) for three weeks during the breeding season. We monitored harems for changes in composition, and...
The feral horse foot. Part B: radiographic, gross visual and histopathological parameters of foot health in 100 Australian feral horses.
Australian veterinary journal    January 30, 2013   Volume 91, Issue 1-2 23-30 doi: 10.1111/avj.12017
Hampson BA, de Laat MA, Mills PC, Walsh DM, Pollitt CC.It has been proposed that the feral horse foot is a benchmark model for foot health in horses. However, the foot health of feral horses has not been formally investigated. Objective: To investigate the foot health of Australian feral horses and determine if foot health is affected by environmental factors, such as substrate properties and distance travelled. Methods: Twenty adult feral horses from five populations (n = 100) were investigated. Populations were selected on the basis of substrate hardness and the amount of travel typical for the population. Feet were radiographed and photographed...
Pattern of social interactions after group integration: a possibility to keep stallions in group.
PloS one    January 30, 2013   Volume 8, Issue 1 e54688 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0054688
Briefer Freymond S, Briefer EF, Von Niederhäusern R, Bachmann I.Horses are often kept in individual stables, rather than in outdoor groups, despite such housing system fulfilling many of their welfare needs, such as the access to social partners. Keeping domestic stallions in outdoor groups would mimic bachelor bands that are found in the wild. Unfortunately, the high level of aggression that unfamiliar stallions display when they first encounter each other discourages owners from keeping them in groups. However, this level of aggression is likely to be particularly important only during group integration, when the dominance hierarchy is being established,...
Contraception can lead to trophic asynchrony between birth pulse and resources.
PloS one    January 28, 2013   Volume 8, Issue 1 e54972 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0054972
Ransom JI, Hobbs NT, Bruemmer J.Abiotic inputs such as photoperiod and temperature can regulate reproductive cyclicity in many species. When humans perturb this process by intervening in reproductive cycles, the ecological consequences may be profound. Trophic mismatches between birth pulse and resources in wildlife species may cascade toward decreased survival and threaten the viability of small populations. We followed feral horses (Equus caballus) in three populations for a longitudinal study of the transient immunocontraceptive porcine zona pellucida (PZP), and found that repeated vaccinations extended the duration of in...
Landscape-scale factors affecting feral horse habitat use during summer within the rocky mountain foothills.
Environmental management    November 27, 2012   Volume 51, Issue 2 435-447 doi: 10.1007/s00267-012-9987-2
Girard TL, Bork EW, Nielsen SE, Alexander MJ.Public lands occupied by feral horses in North America are frequently managed for multiple uses with land use conflict occurring among feral horses, livestock, wildlife, and native grassland conservation. The factors affecting habitat use by horses is critical to understand where conflict may be greatest. We related horse presence and abundance to landscape attributes in a GIS to examine habitat preferences using 98 field plots sampled within a portion of the Rocky Mountain Forest Reserve of SW Alberta, Canada. Horse abundance was greatest in grassland and cut block habitats, and lowest in con...
Adapting to climate change on Western public lands: addressing the ecological effects of domestic, wild, and feral ungulates.
Environmental management    November 15, 2012   Volume 51, Issue 2 474-491 doi: 10.1007/s00267-012-9964-9
Beschta RL, Donahue DL, DellaSala DA, Rhodes JJ, Karr JR, O'Brien MH, Fleischner TL, Deacon Williams C.Climate change affects public land ecosystems and services throughout the American West and these effects are projected to intensify. Even if greenhouse gas emissions are reduced, adaptation strategies for public lands are needed to reduce anthropogenic stressors of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems and to help native species and ecosystems survive in an altered environment. Historical and contemporary livestock production-the most widespread and long-running commercial use of public lands-can alter vegetation, soils, hydrology, and wildlife species composition and abundances in ways that exa...
Explaining spatial heterogeneity in population dynamics and genetics from spatial variation in resources for a large herbivore.
PloS one    October 31, 2012   Volume 7, Issue 10 e47858 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0047858
Contasti AL, Tissier EJ, Johnstone JF, McLoughlin PD.Fine-scale spatial variation in genetic relatedness and inbreeding occur across continuous distributions of several populations of vertebrates; however, the basis of observed variation is often left untested. Here we test the hypothesis that prior observations of spatial patterns in genetics for an island population of feral horses (Sable Island, Canada) were the result of spatial variation in population dynamics, itself based in spatial heterogeneity in underlying habitat quality. In order to assess how genetic and population structuring related to habitat, we used hierarchical cluster analys...
Identification of a novel equine infectious anemia virus field strain isolated from feral horses in southern Japan.
The Journal of general virology    October 24, 2012   Volume 94, Issue Pt 2 360-365 doi: 10.1099/vir.0.047498-0
Dong JB, Zhu W, Cook FR, Goto Y, Horii Y, Haga T.Although equine infectious anemia (EIA) was described more than 150 years ago, complete genomic sequences have only been obtained from two field strains of EIA virus (EIAV), EIAV(Wyoming) and EIAV(Liaoning). In 2011, EIA was detected within the distinctive feral Misaki horse population that inhabits the Toi-Cape area of southern Japan. Complete proviral sequences comprising a novel field strain were amplified directly from peripheral blood of one of these EIAV-infected horses and characterized by nucleotide sequencing. The complete provirus of Miyazaki2011-A strain is 8208 bp in length with an...
Analysis of stomach bacterial communities in Australian feral horses.
Molecular biology reports    October 13, 2012   Volume 40, Issue 1 369-376 doi: 10.1007/s11033-012-2070-5
St-Pierre B, de la Fuente G, O'Neill S, Wright AD, Al Jassim R.We investigated the community structure of bacteria that populate the stomach of the Brumby, a breed of feral horses from the Australian outback. Using a 16S rRNA gene clone library, we identified 155 clones that were assigned to 26 OTUs based on a 99.0 % sequence identity cutoff. Two OTUs represented 73.5 % of clones, while 18 OTUs were each assigned only a single clone. Four major bacterial types were identified in the Brumby stomach: Lactobacillaceae, Streptococcaceae, Veillonellaceae and Pasteurellaceae. The first three groups, which represented 98.1 % of the Brumby stomach library clones,...
Origins of the domestic horse.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America    October 12, 2012   Volume 109, Issue 46 E3148-E3149 doi: 10.1073/pnas.1210326109
Forster P, Hurles ME, Jansen T, Levine M, Renfrew C.No abstract available
The feral horse foot. Part A: observational study of the effect of environment on the morphometrics of the feet of 100 Australian feral horses.
Australian veterinary journal    September 21, 2012   Volume 91, Issue 1-2 14-22 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2012.00995.x
Hampson BA, de Laat MA, Mills PC, Pollitt CC.To better understand the morphology of, and the effect of different travel patterns and varying substrate environments on, the feral horse foot to better manage the feet of domestic horses. Methods: The left forefeet of 20 adult feral horses from each of five geographically separated populations in Australia (n = 100) were investigated. Populations were selected on the basis of substrate hardness under foot and the amount of travel typical for the population. Feet were radiographed and photographed and 40 morphometric measurements of each foot were obtained. Results: Of the 40 parameters, 37 d...
Development of a nested PCR assay to detect equine infectious anemia proviral DNA from peripheral blood of naturally infected horses.
Archives of virology    July 14, 2012   Volume 157, Issue 11 2105-2111 doi: 10.1007/s00705-012-1406-8
Dong JB, Zhu W, Cook FR, Goto Y, Horii Y, Haga T.Equine infectious anemia (EIA) has posed a major challenge and caused significant losses to the equine industry worldwide. PCR detection methods have considerable potential as an adjunct to conventional serological diagnostic techniques. However, most published PCR methods, including that recommended by the OIE, were designed using laboratory-adapted virus strains and do not function with field isolates of EIA virus (EIAV). In the present study, a nested PCR assay for detection of EIAV proviral DNA in peripheral blood cells of naturally infected horses was developed. Primer sets were designed ...
Histopathological examination of chronic laminitis in Kaimanawa feral horses of New Zealand.
New Zealand veterinary journal    May 24, 2012   Volume 60, Issue 5 285-289 doi: 10.1080/00480169.2012.682271
Hampson BA, de Laat MA, Beausac C, Rovel T, Pollitt CC.To investigate the prevalence, histopathological and histomorphometric presentation of chronic laminitis in a population of Kaimanawa feral horses. Methods: Following the capture and euthanasia of feral horses from the Kaimanawa Ranges of New Zealand, the left forefoot of 28 stallions and 28 mares aged between 6 and 12 years were removed and processed for histology. Sections of lamellar samples from each horse were examined using light microscopy. The presence of laminitis was assessed and the histopathological lesions were described. Horses were grouped by histological diagnosis into laminiti...
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