Helmerich Pia, Bachmann Iris, Gygax Lorenz
Animal Husbandry & Ethology, Faculty of Life Sciences, Albrecht Daniel Thaer-Institute of Agricultural and Horticultural Sciences, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Agroscope, Haras National Suisse HNS, Avenches, Switzerland.
Equine Vet J. 2025 Jan;57(1):277-281. doi: 10.1111/evj.14041. Epub 2024 Jan 1.
Horses must lie down to go into vital rapid-eye movement (REM) sleep. If they are not lying down for sufficiently long periods they can become so sleep-deprived that they collapse uncontrollably, which results in a risk of injuries.
To investigate how recumbency as a prerequisite to REM sleep on the experimental days and the following nights was influenced by changes in social and spatial environment throughout the day.
Cross-over design in which subjects experienced each experimental condition twice.
Observations were conducted on a horse farm. Ten young horses in training were observed on days when they were alone indoors in a box, on an outdoor paddock alone, on the same paddock in pairs, and in the following night stabled alone. The number of lying bouts and the total lying duration throughout the day and night were assessed automatically using 3D-accelerometers and data were evaluated using mixed-models.
Horses had a higher number of lying bouts during the days (p = 0.05, by a factor of 1.21 [95% CI: 1.00-1.45]) and longer lying duration at night (p < 0.001, by a factor of 11.25 [6.47-18.40]). On average, the number of lying bouts and the duration of lying increased from being indoors alone, to being outdoors alone, and outdoors in pairs although this could not be statistically supported (bouts: p = 0.5, by a factor of 1.08 [0.84-1.36] and 1.17 [0.91-1.48]; p = 0.6, duration: by a factor of 1.39 [0.73-2.93] and 1.38 [0.68-2.78]).
A small number of horses were observed and there was large variability between days within horses.
We found some indications that open space and a social companion throughout the day increased time lying down in the day as well as during the following nights thus allowing for more REM sleep.
马必须躺下才能进入至关重要的快速眼动(REM)睡眠。如果它们躺下的时间不够长,就会严重睡眠不足,进而不受控制地瘫倒,这会带来受伤风险。
研究在实验日及随后的夜晚,作为REM睡眠前提条件的躺卧状态是如何受到全天社会和空间环境变化影响的。
交叉设计,即研究对象在每种实验条件下均经历两次。
在一个养马场进行观察。对10匹正在训练的年轻马进行观察,观察它们在单独待在室内马厩、单独在室外围场、与另一匹马在同一围场以及随后单独在马厩过夜时的情况。使用三维加速度计自动评估全天和整夜的躺卧次数及总躺卧时长,并使用混合模型对数据进行评估。
马在白天的躺卧次数更多(p = 0.05,系数为1.21 [95%置信区间:1.00 - 1.45]),夜间躺卧时长更长(p < 0.001,系数为11.25 [6.47 - 18.40])。平均而言,躺卧次数和躺卧时长从单独在室内、到单独在室外、再到与另一匹马在室外时均有所增加,尽管这在统计学上未得到支持(躺卧次数:p = 0.5,系数分别为1.08 [0.84 - 1.36]和1.17 [0.91 - 1.48];p = 0.6,躺卧时长:系数分别为1.39 [0.73 - 2.93]和1.38 [0.68 - 2.78])。
观察的马匹数量较少,且马匹在不同日期之间存在较大变异性。
我们发现一些迹象表明,全天的开放空间和社交伙伴会增加白天及随后夜晚的躺卧时间,从而允许更多的快速眼动睡眠。