Factors That Affect Harem Stability in a Feral Horse (Equus caballus) Population on Shackleford Banks island, NC

Mammal species often live in social groups, but the factors that promote group cohesion can be difficult to analyze due to the prevalence of strong group affiliations. Feral horses maintain stable harems of one or two males and several females, and harem stability is strongly related to individual f...

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Main Author: Madosky, Jessa
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks@UNO 2011
Subjects:
PZP
Online Access:https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/450
https://scholarworks.uno.edu/context/td/article/1260/viewcontent/2011_PhD_Madosky_Jessa.pdf
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spelling ftunivneworleans:oai:scholarworks.uno.edu:td-1260 2023-06-18T03:39:58+02:00 Factors That Affect Harem Stability in a Feral Horse (Equus caballus) Population on Shackleford Banks island, NC Madosky, Jessa 2011-08-04T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/450 https://scholarworks.uno.edu/context/td/article/1260/viewcontent/2011_PhD_Madosky_Jessa.pdf unknown ScholarWorks@UNO https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/450 https://scholarworks.uno.edu/context/td/article/1260/viewcontent/2011_PhD_Madosky_Jessa.pdf University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations Feral horse behavior equine behavior harem stability social stability immunocontraception activity budgets harassment PZP Equus caballus Population Biology Zoology text 2011 ftunivneworleans 2023-06-04T20:19:47Z Mammal species often live in social groups, but the factors that promote group cohesion can be difficult to analyze due to the prevalence of strong group affiliations. Feral horses maintain stable harems of one or two males and several females, and harem stability is strongly related to individual fitness. Anecdotal evidence and an early study in the non-breeding season suggest that management of the Shackleford Banks island horses with immunocontraception reduces harem stability in the population, providing an opportunity to study the factors that influence harem stability. I investigated the effects of the immunocontraceptive PZP on harem stability during the breeding season and examined mare activity budgets and harassment rates to determine if these factors influence harem stability. I hypothesized that 1) immunocontraception would increase the rates at which mares changed harems during the breeding season 2) activity budgets of contracepted individuals would differ significantly from those of uncontracepted individuals, and 3) contracepted mares would experience greater levels of harassment associated with changing harems than uncontracepted mares. I found that the immunocontraceptive does increase harem changes during the breeding season. I also found that contracepted mares have different activity budgets than uncontracepted mares; as predicted, contracepted mares grazed less and moved more than uncontracepted controls. The factors that influence mare activity budgets included immunocontraception, harem stallion, number of individuals in the harem, number of mares in the harem and body condition of the mare, as well as some interactions between factors. I found that high harassment rates by both harem stallions and other mares in the harem are correlated with higher harem change rates and that contracepted mares are harassed more than uncontracepted mares. These results indicate that the immunocontraceptive does influence harem stability in this feral horse population, potentially through alterations in ... Text Banks Island The University of New Orleans: ScholarWorks@UNO
institution Open Polar
collection The University of New Orleans: ScholarWorks@UNO
op_collection_id ftunivneworleans
language unknown
topic Feral horse behavior
equine behavior
harem stability
social stability
immunocontraception
activity budgets
harassment
PZP
Equus caballus
Population Biology
Zoology
spellingShingle Feral horse behavior
equine behavior
harem stability
social stability
immunocontraception
activity budgets
harassment
PZP
Equus caballus
Population Biology
Zoology
Madosky, Jessa
Factors That Affect Harem Stability in a Feral Horse (Equus caballus) Population on Shackleford Banks island, NC
topic_facet Feral horse behavior
equine behavior
harem stability
social stability
immunocontraception
activity budgets
harassment
PZP
Equus caballus
Population Biology
Zoology
description Mammal species often live in social groups, but the factors that promote group cohesion can be difficult to analyze due to the prevalence of strong group affiliations. Feral horses maintain stable harems of one or two males and several females, and harem stability is strongly related to individual fitness. Anecdotal evidence and an early study in the non-breeding season suggest that management of the Shackleford Banks island horses with immunocontraception reduces harem stability in the population, providing an opportunity to study the factors that influence harem stability. I investigated the effects of the immunocontraceptive PZP on harem stability during the breeding season and examined mare activity budgets and harassment rates to determine if these factors influence harem stability. I hypothesized that 1) immunocontraception would increase the rates at which mares changed harems during the breeding season 2) activity budgets of contracepted individuals would differ significantly from those of uncontracepted individuals, and 3) contracepted mares would experience greater levels of harassment associated with changing harems than uncontracepted mares. I found that the immunocontraceptive does increase harem changes during the breeding season. I also found that contracepted mares have different activity budgets than uncontracepted mares; as predicted, contracepted mares grazed less and moved more than uncontracepted controls. The factors that influence mare activity budgets included immunocontraception, harem stallion, number of individuals in the harem, number of mares in the harem and body condition of the mare, as well as some interactions between factors. I found that high harassment rates by both harem stallions and other mares in the harem are correlated with higher harem change rates and that contracepted mares are harassed more than uncontracepted mares. These results indicate that the immunocontraceptive does influence harem stability in this feral horse population, potentially through alterations in ...
format Text
author Madosky, Jessa
author_facet Madosky, Jessa
author_sort Madosky, Jessa
title Factors That Affect Harem Stability in a Feral Horse (Equus caballus) Population on Shackleford Banks island, NC
title_short Factors That Affect Harem Stability in a Feral Horse (Equus caballus) Population on Shackleford Banks island, NC
title_full Factors That Affect Harem Stability in a Feral Horse (Equus caballus) Population on Shackleford Banks island, NC
title_fullStr Factors That Affect Harem Stability in a Feral Horse (Equus caballus) Population on Shackleford Banks island, NC
title_full_unstemmed Factors That Affect Harem Stability in a Feral Horse (Equus caballus) Population on Shackleford Banks island, NC
title_sort factors that affect harem stability in a feral horse (equus caballus) population on shackleford banks island, nc
publisher ScholarWorks@UNO
publishDate 2011
url https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/450
https://scholarworks.uno.edu/context/td/article/1260/viewcontent/2011_PhD_Madosky_Jessa.pdf
genre Banks Island
genre_facet Banks Island
op_source University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/450
https://scholarworks.uno.edu/context/td/article/1260/viewcontent/2011_PhD_Madosky_Jessa.pdf
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