EFFECTS OF TRANSPORTATION STRESS ON SOME PHYSIOLOGICAL INDICATORS IN SPORT HORSES
Keywords:
horse, stress, transportation, and welfareAbstract
Our research monitored the response of some welfare indicators in sport horses
during transport by assessing the intensity of stress during travel time, changes in
heart rate, cortisol, lactic acid and creatinine levels. The horses included in the
study were separated into 2 groups: horses that were transported for the first time (A
n: 12) and horses that had been previously transported (B n: 10).
The values of the indicators varied between the two groups regardless of the fact
that travel length and transport conditions were almost identical. The heart rate and
cortisol levels were elevated in horses from group A as compared to the ones in
group B while the latter showed increased levels of these indicators upon repeating
the loading and unloading (100-130 nmol/l). The recorded value of lactic acid was
higher for the first group (2,2 mmol/l), only until the moment when the horses
adapted to the effort, after which it decreased (1,8 mmol/l).
Transport of horses under certain conditions related to their adjusting to
manhandling during loading and unloading operations, as well as the animals’
temper, may be considered a stress factor with significant depreciating effect on
horse welfare.
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