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How Do Mares Protect Their Foals?
A: Horses are made to run from predators and other threats. Foals are born precocious, meaning in a very short time after birth they can stand and run with effective agility. So the main mechanism horses have as protection for themselves and their foals is to run away from danger.
I’ve spent almost no time myself watching feral horses or wild equids so I cannot share from experience a harem band’s response to a predator. However, I have not read any accounts of ritual circling of foals as defense from predators. Dr. Sue McDonnell (PhD), in her Equid Ethogram, mentions adults “clustering” around foals when the band is on the move. It would not surprise me if a group of mares, solidly cornered, sequestered their foals behind themselves to protect them from a predator. However, the circling behavior you’re probably thinking of is one more common to some other large prey species and the thing that is common among those is that they have some other defensive and offensive physical attributes, such as horns or tusks. Even these species might choose to run first, then circle if needed. Also, unlike these other species that run in a large herd and effectively form circles, feral bands of horses tend to have only a few individuals, so making a tight and menacing circle will be harder to do.
Certainly a mare can bite, strike, or kick at a threat to her foal and will do so if flight is unavailable or unsuccessful. Likewise, a stallion will be protective of his band and his position as the harem stallion and will indulge in elaborate posturing and fight sequences against threatening or intruding outside stallions
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Written by:
Nancy Diehl, VMD, MS
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