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Behavior Lab Projects in Progress: 2003


Elkanah Grogan

Equine Behavior Lab, New Bolton Center
University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine


The Equid Video Ethogram DVD


 

One of the long-term goals of our behavior lab is to improve science-based knowledge of horse behavior available to biologists, veterinarians, animal scientists, horse enthusiasts, and the general public. One specific objective is to develop and publish equid ethograms, which are annotated catalogs describing behavior sequences and their various elements. To date we have published two ethograms in the scientific literature, each on a specific class of behavior. The first was on intermale agonistic behavior among bachelor stallions (McDonnell and Haviland, 1995) and the second on play behavior (McDonnell and Poulin, 2002). This year a book version including all classes of behavior entitled The Equid Ethogram: A Practical Field Guide to Horse Behavior (McDonnell, 2003) was published for both the academic and the lay audience.

            As a companion to the book, we now are obtaining video samples of all of the behavior entries to develop an interactive DVD. This would allow high quality digital video clips with quality audio to be viewed for each book entry. The DVD format has been selected because it can be played on computers with DVD-ROM drives or on inexpensive stand-alone DVD players.

           To date, samples of almost all behaviors have been obtained, with parturition the only remaining sequence. We hope to produce the first version ourselves. We are currently exploring DVD development software and hardware capable of handling the production in house.


 

Social Organization and Reproductive Patterns in a Semi-feral Herd – Getting Organized for a 10-Year Summary

            The semi-feral pony herd at New Bolton Center was started in 1995 with unrelated stallions and mares. Over that period animals have lived under natural social conditions and observations on social organization and fertility have been recorded daily. As we approach the ten year history. It is our goal to summarize social organization and reproductive patterns, including reproductive maturation, reproductive success, fertility, and paternity over the first ten-year period for comparison with data published from a similar group of horses in France. Toward that goal we are extracting data and organizing descriptive summaries and comparisons and the related literature.

In this presentation example data summarized for the first eight years of the NBC herd will be presented and compared to the French data.  In general these two herds have extremely high, fertility and low inbreeding.  The NBC has had earlier maturation of females and higher survivability of foals. 


 

Equine Cognition:
Learning Efficiency in Simple Operant Associative Tasks Across Visual, Olfactory, Tactile, and Auditory Modalities with
Preliminary Comparison of Stallions, Geldings, and Mares
   

           
            A goal of our lab is to develop simple stall-side methods to assess cognitive ability of horses. In the present study, our primary objective was to develop a battery of four associative operant two-choice tasks representing associative tasks common to equine training, and each using a different sensory modality. A second objective was to compare operant learning efficiency of geldings, stallions, and mares in these four tasks. The visual task involved the subject learning to indicate choice by touching the muzzle to the illuminated vs non-illuminated half of a Plexiglas panel placed in front of the subject, which was randomly illuminated on the left or right half. The tactile task involved learning to indicate choice by significantly manipulating (rolling, licking, picking up, or tossing) a frozen vs a room-temperature plastic freezer pack rod presented in random order into the left or right of two containers positioned in front of the subject. The auditory task involved learning to indicate choice of direction of a door-bell ring presented in random order to the left or right of the subject by the subject touching the muzzle to the corresponding side of a Plexiglas panel positioned in front of the subject. The olfactory task involved learning to indicate choice by significant manipulation of a plastic bottle with scented vs non-scented contents randomly presented into the left or right of two containers positioned in front of the subject. Behavior was shaped by following attention to or manipulation of the correct choice with a palatable food reward (small portion of carrot, apple, sweet feed, sweetened cereal, or cookie) and progressively delaying reward to provoke more significant manipulation of the correct choice. Incorrect choices were not rewarded. Eight subjects received the battery in the order of visual, tactile, auditory, and olfactory. Two subjects received the battery in the order of olfactory, then visual, tactile, and auditory. For each modality series, a single technician performed all trials for all subjects.

            Subjects enrolled to date and being studied simultaneously include 4 pony stallions, 5 pony geldings and one ovariectomized pony mare. Six of these subjects entered the study naïve to learning trials of this type and four (2 geldings, one stallion, and the mare) had participated in previous tactile and/or visual 2-choice associative operant tasks of a different type than those used here.

            Measures of learning efficiency for each task included the number of presentations to achieve significant manipulation, number of presentations to achieve success (defined as responding significantly above the level of chance on 20 or more successive presentations in a single trial), number of minutes to achieve success, and the percentage of correct responses during the trial in which success was achieved. If subjects had not achieved success after 200 presentations the series for the particular modality was ended.

            To date, all subjects have completed the visual and tactile series. Cursory inspection of data so far for visual and tactile tasks suggest that learning efficiency for individuals and gender classes may not be consistent across modalities.


 

These are Dorothy Russell Havemeyer Foundation Projects.


Kana Grogan is a native of Chester County who is currently majoring in Animal Science at the University of Delaware.  She has been the Havemeyer Summer Research Assistant since summer of 2001.  In that position she has served as the semi-feral herd manager, as the research and clinical “gal Friday,” and as the lab photographer.  She has also conducted a number of preliminary studies, assisted with the completion of Havemeyer summer student projects, and assisted with mentoring projects.  She has made major contributions to the ethogram book project and is managing the video ethogram project.  Recently Kana has focused her interest and efforts on our cognition studies.