Habitat preferences and shelter seeking behaviour of extensively kept Gotland Ponies

The constant decline of permanent pastures in Sweden has a negative impact on biodiversity. A multidisciplinary project is investigating if the endangered native Gotland pony could be used to keep and restore the biodiversity of permanent pastures and forests, on a minimal labour input, without c...

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Autor principal: Näslund, Karin
Formato: H3
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231) 2016
Materias:
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author Näslund, Karin
author_browse Näslund, Karin
author_facet Näslund, Karin
author_sort Näslund, Karin
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description The constant decline of permanent pastures in Sweden has a negative impact on biodiversity. A multidisciplinary project is investigating if the endangered native Gotland pony could be used to keep and restore the biodiversity of permanent pastures and forests, on a minimal labour input, without compromising the ponies’ welfare. This thesis is a part of that project, focusing on the ponies’ resource utilisation. In May 2014 twelve one year old Gotland pony stallions were released into three enclosures of approximately 10 ha each, consisting of about 3 ha of lay and 7 ha of forest respectively. These enclosures were provided with man-made shelters and water troughs, but there were no supplementary feed given inside the enclosures during the year of the trial. To evaluate the ponies’ preferences for different vegetation types the ponies were equipped with a GPS-collars. The shelters were equipped with movement sensitive cameras to monitor how and when the ponies utilized them. The results showed that the ponies favoured lay at almost all weather conditions, except when snow was covering the ground. Forest usage increased during the winter as feed got less available on the lay, and through out the year it was used more during the night than during the day. The shelters were used about 48 minutes a day throughout the year. They were used mostly during daytime in the non-vegetative season, but during the vegetative season there were no differences in shelter use between night and day. Most previous studies of shelter seeking behaviour were preformed in small paddocks with ad libitum feed for the horses, and resulted in a significantly higher shelter usage than seen in the present study. Presumably, the ponies spent a lot of time foraging, fulfilling their nutritional needs. Ad libitum fed horses have no need, and sometimes no possibility, to preform the same behaviours. This could be one of the reasons for the difference in shelter seeking behaviour in this study compared to the literature.
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id RepoSLU8723
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231)
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231)
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spelling RepoSLU87232016-01-22T13:16:35Z Habitat preferences and shelter seeking behaviour of extensively kept Gotland Ponies Habitatval hos Gotlandsruss på åretruntbete Näslund, Karin year round grazing extensive grazing shelter shelter seeking haviour GPS-collar horse The constant decline of permanent pastures in Sweden has a negative impact on biodiversity. A multidisciplinary project is investigating if the endangered native Gotland pony could be used to keep and restore the biodiversity of permanent pastures and forests, on a minimal labour input, without compromising the ponies’ welfare. This thesis is a part of that project, focusing on the ponies’ resource utilisation. In May 2014 twelve one year old Gotland pony stallions were released into three enclosures of approximately 10 ha each, consisting of about 3 ha of lay and 7 ha of forest respectively. These enclosures were provided with man-made shelters and water troughs, but there were no supplementary feed given inside the enclosures during the year of the trial. To evaluate the ponies’ preferences for different vegetation types the ponies were equipped with a GPS-collars. The shelters were equipped with movement sensitive cameras to monitor how and when the ponies utilized them. The results showed that the ponies favoured lay at almost all weather conditions, except when snow was covering the ground. Forest usage increased during the winter as feed got less available on the lay, and through out the year it was used more during the night than during the day. The shelters were used about 48 minutes a day throughout the year. They were used mostly during daytime in the non-vegetative season, but during the vegetative season there were no differences in shelter use between night and day. Most previous studies of shelter seeking behaviour were preformed in small paddocks with ad libitum feed for the horses, and resulted in a significantly higher shelter usage than seen in the present study. Presumably, the ponies spent a lot of time foraging, fulfilling their nutritional needs. Ad libitum fed horses have no need, and sometimes no possibility, to preform the same behaviours. This could be one of the reasons for the difference in shelter seeking behaviour in this study compared to the literature. SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231) 2016 H3 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/8723/
spellingShingle year round grazing
extensive grazing
shelter
shelter seeking haviour
GPS-collar
horse
Näslund, Karin
Habitat preferences and shelter seeking behaviour of extensively kept Gotland Ponies
title Habitat preferences and shelter seeking behaviour of extensively kept Gotland Ponies
title_full Habitat preferences and shelter seeking behaviour of extensively kept Gotland Ponies
title_fullStr Habitat preferences and shelter seeking behaviour of extensively kept Gotland Ponies
title_full_unstemmed Habitat preferences and shelter seeking behaviour of extensively kept Gotland Ponies
title_short Habitat preferences and shelter seeking behaviour of extensively kept Gotland Ponies
title_sort habitat preferences and shelter seeking behaviour of extensively kept gotland ponies
topic year round grazing
extensive grazing
shelter
shelter seeking haviour
GPS-collar
horse