Speed of gaits in Icelandic horses and relationships to sex, age, conformation measurements and subjective judges’ scores

The aim was to measure the mean and maximum speed and the range of speed in all gaits of Icelandic horses shown at a breed evaluation field test (BEFT). In addition, the effect of speed on scores for the gaits and whether speed was affected by age, sex and conformation measurements were investigated...

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Published in:Comparative Exercise Physiology
Main Authors: Stefánsdóttir, G.J., Jansson, A., Ragnarsson, S., Gunnarsson, V.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Brill 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/cep200039
https://brill.com/view/journals/cep/17/2/article-p151_151.xml
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spelling crbrillap:10.3920/cep200039 2024-09-09T19:47:50+00:00 Speed of gaits in Icelandic horses and relationships to sex, age, conformation measurements and subjective judges’ scores Stefánsdóttir, G.J. Jansson, A. Ragnarsson, S. Gunnarsson, V. 2021 http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/cep200039 https://brill.com/view/journals/cep/17/2/article-p151_151.xml unknown Brill http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 Comparative Exercise Physiology volume 17, issue 2, page 151-160 ISSN 1755-2540 1755-2559 journal-article 2021 crbrillap https://doi.org/10.3920/cep200039 2024-08-12T04:07:12Z The aim was to measure the mean and maximum speed and the range of speed in all gaits of Icelandic horses shown at a breed evaluation field test (BEFT). In addition, the effect of speed on scores for the gaits and whether speed was affected by age, sex and conformation measurements were investigated. The study was carried out in Iceland on 266 horses (180 mares and 86 stallions). Horse speed and distance ridden were recorded by global positioning system during the riding assessment in BEFT. Conformation measurements and scores for each gait were obtained from the official studbook Worldfengur . The range of speed in walk, slow tölt, tölt, trot, pace, canter and gallop was, respectively, 1.5-2.2, 3.2-5.5, 4.6-10.6, 4.5-8.6, 7.1-11.9, 5.8-9.8 and 7.9-13.5 m/s (n=149-248). Scores for all gaits were affected by speed of the gait, with speed explaining most variance in scores for pace (53%) and least in scores for slow tölt and walk (2 and 3%, respectively). Stallions were faster than mares in tölt, trot, pace and canter ( P <0.05). Horses aged ≥7 years and 6-year-olds were faster in pace and canter than 4-year-olds ( P <0.05). Horse conformation measurements most affected speed in pace and walk, which were elevated with increased height at withers, height at croup, body length and length of front legs ( P <0.05). In conclusion, objective measurements of speed in the gaits of Icelandic horses shown in a BEFT were documented for the first time. The information can be used to formulate requirements for gaits in BEFT and in competition manuals. Objective measurements of speed should be used in future assessments of gaits in Icelandic horses in BEFT, and thus improve standardisation and genetic evaluation of breeding horses. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Brill Comparative Exercise Physiology 17 2 151 160
institution Open Polar
collection Brill
op_collection_id crbrillap
language unknown
description The aim was to measure the mean and maximum speed and the range of speed in all gaits of Icelandic horses shown at a breed evaluation field test (BEFT). In addition, the effect of speed on scores for the gaits and whether speed was affected by age, sex and conformation measurements were investigated. The study was carried out in Iceland on 266 horses (180 mares and 86 stallions). Horse speed and distance ridden were recorded by global positioning system during the riding assessment in BEFT. Conformation measurements and scores for each gait were obtained from the official studbook Worldfengur . The range of speed in walk, slow tölt, tölt, trot, pace, canter and gallop was, respectively, 1.5-2.2, 3.2-5.5, 4.6-10.6, 4.5-8.6, 7.1-11.9, 5.8-9.8 and 7.9-13.5 m/s (n=149-248). Scores for all gaits were affected by speed of the gait, with speed explaining most variance in scores for pace (53%) and least in scores for slow tölt and walk (2 and 3%, respectively). Stallions were faster than mares in tölt, trot, pace and canter ( P <0.05). Horses aged ≥7 years and 6-year-olds were faster in pace and canter than 4-year-olds ( P <0.05). Horse conformation measurements most affected speed in pace and walk, which were elevated with increased height at withers, height at croup, body length and length of front legs ( P <0.05). In conclusion, objective measurements of speed in the gaits of Icelandic horses shown in a BEFT were documented for the first time. The information can be used to formulate requirements for gaits in BEFT and in competition manuals. Objective measurements of speed should be used in future assessments of gaits in Icelandic horses in BEFT, and thus improve standardisation and genetic evaluation of breeding horses.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Stefánsdóttir, G.J.
Jansson, A.
Ragnarsson, S.
Gunnarsson, V.
spellingShingle Stefánsdóttir, G.J.
Jansson, A.
Ragnarsson, S.
Gunnarsson, V.
Speed of gaits in Icelandic horses and relationships to sex, age, conformation measurements and subjective judges’ scores
author_facet Stefánsdóttir, G.J.
Jansson, A.
Ragnarsson, S.
Gunnarsson, V.
author_sort Stefánsdóttir, G.J.
title Speed of gaits in Icelandic horses and relationships to sex, age, conformation measurements and subjective judges’ scores
title_short Speed of gaits in Icelandic horses and relationships to sex, age, conformation measurements and subjective judges’ scores
title_full Speed of gaits in Icelandic horses and relationships to sex, age, conformation measurements and subjective judges’ scores
title_fullStr Speed of gaits in Icelandic horses and relationships to sex, age, conformation measurements and subjective judges’ scores
title_full_unstemmed Speed of gaits in Icelandic horses and relationships to sex, age, conformation measurements and subjective judges’ scores
title_sort speed of gaits in icelandic horses and relationships to sex, age, conformation measurements and subjective judges’ scores
publisher Brill
publishDate 2021
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/cep200039
https://brill.com/view/journals/cep/17/2/article-p151_151.xml
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Comparative Exercise Physiology
volume 17, issue 2, page 151-160
ISSN 1755-2540 1755-2559
op_rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3920/cep200039
container_title Comparative Exercise Physiology
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