EQUUS

WHAT HORSES NEED TO GET GOOD SLEEP

The study horses would lie down to sleep more frequently when kept outdoors during the day with a companion.

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Horses, much like people, seem to get better quality sleep at night if they get plenty of fresh air, exercise and opportunit­ies to socialize during the day—and have a comfortabl­e place to lie down at night. That’s the upshot of a study from Germany that sought to determine how housing and management affect equine sleep patterns.

The importance of sleep to equine health is a relatively new area of inquiry, says Lorenz Gygax, PhD of Humboldt University of Berlin in Germany. “Until a few years ago, horse owners took relatively little interest in the resting behavior of their animals, but recently attention has increased considerab­ly,” he says. “The topic is now often covered in horse magazines, and countless chat groups have even formed by owners of horses with signs of sleep deprivatio­n on social media channels.”

For their study, Gygax and his team selected 10 young, healthy riding horses that were exercised five days a week. Because the deepest and most restorativ­e stage of sleep— the rapid eye movement (REM) stage—can only be achieved when lying down, the researcher­s attached sensors to the horses’ front legs to monitor how often and how long they were recumbent.

For the two-month study period, the horses spent nights (from 5:00 p.m. to 7:30 a.m.) alone in box stalls. During the day, they were kept in one of three arrangemen­ts: alone in a stall, outdoors in a paddock alone, or outdoors in a paddock with a familiar equine companion.

The study design allowed for the rotation of each horse through the different daytime arrangemen­ts in various sequences. By the end of the experiment, all of the horses had been kept in each daytime arrangemen­t on two separate occasions.

Reviewing the collected data, the researcher­s discovered that the horses laid down most often during the day when they were outdoors with a friend. At night, the horses laid down less frequently, but for longer periods of time. “Difference­s between the indoor box and the outdoor paddock may be explained by different materials on the ground…the increased space available or the open view in the paddock might have provided a sense of security,” the researcher­s wrote in the published study.

What’s more, the study horses were slightly more likely to lie down on those nights that followed days spent outdoors with a friend, as opposed to days when they were kept alone in a paddock or in a stall. “It is possible that the sense of security perceived throughout the day may have been carried over into the following night,” the researcher­s note. “This would mean that the horses felt more secure in the night following a day with a higher sense of security, lying for longer and potentiall­y allowing a higher amount of REM sleep.”

On average, the study horses laid down three hours per night, with the total duration ranging from 1.5 hours to 5.5 hours. And, although it’s unknown exactly how much REM sleep horses need, says Gygax, “as far as can be assessed, these amounts of recumbency should give sufficient opportunit­y for deep sleep.”

Efforts to maximize a horse’s opportunit­y for deep sleep are best directed towards providing a sense of security, says Gygax. “This would include a stable social environmen­t with liked social partners and ideally a view of the surroundin­gs. Furthermor­e, a sufficient­ly large lying area with a suitable deformable (soft) substrate (litter, sand in the outdoor area) must be available.”

Reference: “Comparing lying behavior of young riding horses on days in an individual indoor box, on an outdoor paddock alone, or in pairs and in the following night,” Equine Veterinary Journal, January 2024

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