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The National Agricultural Library is one of four national libraries of the United States, with locations in Beltsville, Maryland and Washington, D.C. It houses one of the world's largest and most accessible agricultural information collections and serves as the nexus for a national network of state land-grant and U.S. Department of Agriculture field libraries. In fiscal year 2011 (Oct 2010 through Sept 2011) NAL delivered more than 100 million direct customer service transactions.

Actif (Le fournisseur de données a soumis des métadonnées au cours de la dernière année civile)
Journal Article

Article de revue

Impact of riding in a coercively obtained Rollkur posture on welfare and fear of performance horses  [2009]

von Borstel, Uta Ulrike; Duncan, Ian James Heatly; Shoveller, Anna Kate; Merkies, Katrina; et al.

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Rollkur, the usually coercively obtained hyperflexion of the horse's neck, is employed as a training method by some dressage riders; however, its use is controversial as it may cause discomfort and adversely affect the horse's welfare. The objectives of this study were to determine: (1) if horses showed differences in stress, discomfort and fear responses as measured by heart rate and behaviour when ridden in Rollkur (R) obtained by pressure on the reins compared to regular poll flexion (i.e. with the nose-line being at or just in front of the vertical; N), and (2) if they showed a preference between the two riding styles when given the choice. Fifteen riding horses were ridden 30 times through a Y-maze randomly alternating between sides. Riding through one arm of the Y-maze was always followed by a short round ridden in R, whereas riding through the other arm was followed by a short round ridden in N. Immediately after the conditioning phase, horses were again repeatedly ridden into the maze; however, riders left it to the horse to decide which arm of the maze to enter. During R, horses moved slower and showed more often behavioural signs of discomfort, such as tail-swishing, head-tossing or attempted bucks (P <0.05), and 14 of the 15 horses chose significantly (P <0.05) more often the maze-arm associated with N rather than R. Subsequently, eight of the horses were also subjected to two fear tests following a short ride in N as well as a ride in R. During
R, horses tended to react stronger (P =0.092) to the fear stimuli and to take longer (P =0.087) to approach them. These findings indicate that a coercively obtained Rollkur position may be uncomfortable for horses and that it makes them more fearful and therefore potentially more dangerous to ride. Further studies need to assess horses' reaction to gradual training of Rollkur, as opposed to a coercively obtained hyperflexion, in order to decide whether the practice should be banned.
(Revue
Applied animal behaviour science
ISSN : 0168-1591

Information bibliographique

Langue:
English
Type:
Journal Article
Sur AGRIS depuis:
2013
Volume:
116
Numéro:
2-4
Page initiale:
228
Page finale:
236
Editeur:
[Amsterdam]: Elsevier Science
Tous les titres:
"Impact of riding in a coercively obtained Rollkur posture on welfare and fear of performance horses"@eng
Autre:
"Includes references"
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Information bibliographique

Langue:
English
Type:
Journal Article
Sur AGRIS depuis:
2013
Volume:
116
Numéro:
2-4
Page initiale:
228
Page finale:
236
Editeur:
[Amsterdam]: Elsevier Science
Tous les titres:
"Impact of riding in a coercively obtained Rollkur posture on welfare and fear of performance horses"@eng
Autre:
"Includes references"