Abstract
Based on questionnaires from horse breeders, we found that bringing a pregnant mare which had been mated away from home into a vicinity of a familiar male who was not the father of her foetus increased probability of pregnancy disruption. These mares aborted in 31% of cases, while none of those mated within the home stable aborted. Repeated sexual activity either by a stallion or dominant gelding from the normal home group was observed shortly after the mare came from away-mating. Pregnant mares isolated from home males by a fence were even seen soliciting them over the fence. We speculate that, once returned to the home “herd”, and introduced to familiar males, mares were more likely to terminate their pregnancy to save energy and avoid likely future infanticidal loss of their progeny by dominant male(s) of the home social group. This is a newly discovered phenomenon where a mare manipulates the male’s paternity assessment by promiscuous mating. It may explain a common increased incidence of foetal loss in domestic horses occurring in nearly 40% of pregnancies. We conclude that the common practice of transporting the mare for mating and then bringing her back to an environment with males, stallions or geldings, which did not sire the foetus, is the main cause of high percentages of pregnancy disruption in domestic horses.
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Acknowledgments
We thank Petr Šimeček, Adam Dušek and other colleagues from the department for discussion to Sarah Blaffer Hrdy for encouragement and Joy Tripovich and Rory Putman for improving English. This work was supported by the Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic (grant number MZe 0002701404).
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The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
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Communicated by M. Festa-Bianchet
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Bartoš, L., Bartošová, J., Pluháček, J. et al. Promiscuous behaviour disrupts pregnancy block in domestic horse mares. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 65, 1567–1572 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-011-1166-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-011-1166-6
Keywords
- Foetal loss
- Domestic horse
- Bruce effect
- Sexual behaviour