Equine Reproduction–The Essential Elements

Learn the basics of reproduction in the horse and how to use them to you the best results.
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Understanding some of the evolutionary history of horses is helpful when pondering their reproductive complexities. After evolving into a grazing animal with great agility and speed (about a million years ago), the modern horse migrated to various parts of the Earth in response to changing physical and weather conditions. After near-extinction 10,000 years ago, the species came back in Asia and gradually repopulated parts of the world as man domesticated and transported the animals. Their return to North America was only 500 years ago, when the Spanish explorers re-introduced horses.

In each diverse area of the world, reproductive function is molded by the environment. Since the gestation period of equids is nearly one year in most cases, adaptation to a breeding season that corresponded to the best weather and grass seasons was important to survival. This seasonality is controlled by several factors, with light being the primary agent. The interaction between lengthening days and melatonin, secreted by the pineal gland, is the control mechanism. Melatonin, which has an inhibitory effect on reproductive function, is reduced as day length increases, releasing the hormonal control of the mare’s cycle.

Thus, the horses of the desert, or other equatorial regions with earlier increases in day length, produce foals throughout a broad season, and the ponies which originate in far northern areas have the shortest breeding and foaling seasons. Breeds that were developed in Britain, northern Europe, and North America are at peak reproductive efficiency between May and August in the northern hemisphere. Arabians, Paso Finos, and breeds of more southerly origin might reproduce all year.

Unfortunately, man has decided what is best, and for most of the athletic breeds, the goal is to produce foals as soon after Jan. 1 as possible. This constant battle with the innate traits of the species results in much of the reproductive inefficiency for which the horse is known. Even with the assistance of artificial lighting to advance the season, and with hormonal systems of manipulating the cycle, we do not approach the potential results attained by those animals which are driven by the combination of long days and good, natural feed

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A. C. (Woody) Asbury received his DVM from Michigan State University in 1956, then spent 21 years in California in breeding farm practice and at UC Davis. He joined the faculty at the University of Florida in 1977 and was involved in teaching, research, and administration until 1996. Asbury was a long-time member of The Horse’s advisory board. He died in 2011 after a lengthy illness.

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