DECEMBER 2019 THE RIDER /11
Horses blink less, twitch eyelids more when stressed
By University of Guelph How can you tell when a horse is
feeling stressed? It’s all in the eyes and the way their eyelids twitch, University of Guelph researchers have discovered. A horse will blink less and twitch
its eyelids more when it’s under mild stress, the research team found—a new finding that could offer handlers a sim- ple, easy-to-spot sign their animal is be- coming agitated. The study, published in the journal
Animals, is thought to be the first to re- veal the significance of eyelid twitches as an indicator of stress, says Prof. Ka- trina Merkies, the study’s lead author. “With humans, we already know
our blinking changes when we are under pressure. Some studies have shown we blink more when agitated while others found we blink less. We wanted to see if horses blink rates change too,” said Merkies, a professor in the Department of Animal Bio- sciences at the Ontario Agricultural College. Although many horse handlers
can tell when their animals are agitated, it can sometimes be hard to get a good read on a horse’s mood—particularly if the animal has been well trained. “When we train horses, we specif-
ically teach them to suppress their stress responses because we don’t want horses to react when they are startled or nervous. But even if they’ve learned to suppress their reaction, it doesn’t actu- ally decrease the stress they feel,” she said.
While stress can be measured
through heart rate monitors or blood cortisol levels, Merkies and her team wanted a non-invasive measurement, so they decided to test whether a horse’s eyes could offer clues. They recruited 33 horses of vari-
ous breeds from three riding lesson fa- cilities in eastern Ontario and exposed them to three mildly stressful scenarios. In the first, a ball was thrown in
front of the horse in an attempt to startle the animal. In the next, the horse was visually separated from its herd for a few minutes. Finally, the horse’s food was withheld for three minutes at feed time while its herd mates were allowed to begin eating. The researchers filmed the horses,
watching for changes in eye and ear movement, head tilt and general rest- lessness. They found that withholding the
feed for a few minutes was the most stressful for the horse as indicated by its increased heart rate, restlessness and head movement. Conversely, separa- tion and the startle test evoked little re- sponse. Researchers attempted to startle
the horses by throwing a ball in front of them.
“It’s important to remember these
were riding school horses, so they were used to being startled and being sepa- rated. But the withholding of food was
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new, so that’s likely why they became stressed,” she said. When researchers reviewed videos of the
horses’ eyes during feed withholding, they no- ticed the horses blinked less but twitched their upper eyelids more. On average, the horses’ full blink rate de-
creased to an average of five blinks per minute during the stress compared to the eight to nine times per minute when relaxed. During the feed restriction, when the horses felt the most stress, their eyelid twitches increased from an average
of two twitches per minute to six twitches per minute. There was no increase in eyelid twitches with the other stress tests. Merkies said she hopes her team’s finding
will help horse handlers looking for simple ways to gauge their animals’ moods. “There’s no one measure that is going to
tell us everything, but this is another tool we can add to the toolbox that we can use together to understand our animals better,” she said. Video
Link
https://youtu.be/W7WMdM3T5TI -
Researchers attempted to startle the horses by throwing a ball in front of them. Credit: University of Guelph.
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