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The intensity of physiological and behavioral responses of horses to predator vocalizations.

Iwona JanczarekAnna StachurskaWitold KędzierskiAnna WiśniewskaMagdalena RyżakAgata Kozioł
Published in: BMC veterinary research (2020)
The horses responded with weak signs of anxiety when exposed to predator vocalizations. A tendency towards a stronger internal reaction to predators in horses with a higher proportion of TB genes suggested that the response intensity was partly innate. The more pronounced response to leopard than wolf may indicate that horses are more frightened of a threatening sound from an unknown predator than one known by their ancestors. The differing response can be also due to differences in the characteristic of the predators' vocalizations. Our findings suggested that the present-day horses' abilities to coexist with predators are weak. Hence, humans should protect horses against predation, especially when introducing them into seminatural locations.
Keyphrases
  • immune response
  • mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • physical activity
  • depressive symptoms
  • transcription factor
  • sleep quality