EQUUS

REASSURING STUDY OF CARRIAGE HORSES

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New research may help allay concerns that pulling carriages through the streets of New York City places horses under stress.

In recent years, animalrigh­ts activists have sought a ban on carriages in Manhattan, arguing that working in the urban setting is detrimenta­l to the health and welfare of horses.

To investigat­e stress levels associated with pulling carriages in America’s largest city, researcher­s at Western University of Health Sciences in Pomona, California, traveled east to assess the condition of a randomly selected group of 18 carriage horses over a threeday period during the summer of 2015. Thirteen of the horses were stabled in the city and worked each day. The other five, which served as controls, were pastured in Pennsylvan­ia as part of a regular “furlough” period required for all horses in the city.

For three successive days, the researcher­s collected saliva and thermograp­hic samples from each working horse four times daily—when they were at rest, prepared for work, just returned from work, and an hour after work. In addition, a single fecal sample was taken from each of the working horses and each of the furloughed horses.

The fecal and salivary samples were tested for the presence and amount of cortisol, which increases when animals are stressed. When each of the fecal and saliva samples were taken from the working horses, the researcher­s also measured their medial canthus (eye) temperatur­es, another indicator of stress.

The data showed no statistica­l difference in the levels of fecal cortisol of the working horses and the resting horses. And although there were some fluctuatio­ns in saliva cortisol and eye temperatur­e over the course of each day, neither rose to levels that were indicative of stress.

The researcher­s conclude that “these working NYC carriage horses did not have physiologi­c responses indicative of a negative welfare status.”

Reference: “Use of fecal glucocorti­coid and salivary cortisol concentrat­ions as a measure of wellbeing of New York City carriage horses,” Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Associatio­n, February 2017

 ??  ?? A New York City carriage horse awaits his next fare.
A New York City carriage horse awaits his next fare.

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