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This chapter describes the process of evaluating equine behaviour during domestication, learning, in cases with clinical conditions, and on equine welfare.
This chapter reviews the five senses in horses namely vision, hearing, smell, taste and touch and shows certain links with behaviour and welfare, both equine and human.
This chapter provides an overview of the complex nervous system and its endocrine partner, which is important in understanding normal behaviour patterns and anomalies in horses.
This chapter focuses on the importance of striving for homeostatic stability in a horse's daily behaviour and rhythms. Ensuring that this knowledge is available to horse people contributes to equine welfare.
This chapter focuses on behaviours that maintain physiological homeostasis, including ingestion, elimination and comfort in horses. The latter includes grooming (hair and skincare) and sheltering behaviours that support thermoregulation and provide refuge from biting insects.
The horse has evolved as a cursorial herbivore. As such, much of its behaviour and physiology had adapted to be capable of large periods of low level activity such as walking and browsing interspersed with short bouts of high speed activity. These evolutionary adpatations have suited the horse...
This chapter describes the territoriality behaviour (home range and core home range, home range estimates, pastures and stabling and stall environment), spatiality, welfare and spacing (spatial needs and implications for management and sport) of horses.
This chapter reviews the recent advances regarding the behavioural, physical, physiological and welfare effects of transport in horses.
This chapter describes the reproductive physiology, behaviour, disorders and technologies in horses, including semen collection, artificial insemination, cloning, embryo transfer, mating behaviour, fertility and abnormal behaviour in mares and stallions.
This chapter describes the reproductive physiology, the normal and abnormal behaviour of mares and the welfare implications to mares and foals.