Do thoroughbred racehorses enjoy their lives? That鈥檚 the question that Hawke鈥檚 Bay professor Nat Waran hopes to definitively answer.
Waran, EIT Te P奴kenga鈥檚 executive dean, is an internationally recognised expert on equine behaviour and welfare.
Her new three-year project will involve working with researchers from Australia and the UK to look into how racehorses express positive emotions in their interactions with humans.
鈥淲e have seen rising societal concerns about the use and treatment of animals across a range of industries, and this is especially the case where animals are involved in sport such as in the thoroughbred racing industry鈥,鈥 Waran said.
The study is set to address welfare concerns in the racing industry, a sector which Waran said is committed to ensuring that equine welfare is a strategic priority.
鈥淭his means that we need to know a lot more about how racehorses feel about their life experiences on and off the track, and how coping with the living, travelling, and working environment impacts upon their welfare.鈥
She said in order to properly assess a horse鈥檚 welfare, there was a need to develop tools that provide information about not just negative emotions, such as fear or stress, but also positive ones such as pleasure and contentment.
Substantial funding for the study has come from the Hong Kong Jockey Club (HKJC) Equine Welfare Foundation. It said it was committed to improving the quality of life of racehorses through research and applying the knowledge that research yields.
Professor of Equine Science at Charles Sturt University in Australia Hayley Randle said it was important that the cumulative effect of a horse鈥檚 experiences was now being recognised, from birth to retirement.
鈥淧eople are taking horses鈥 mental welfare much more seriously than ever before.鈥
This type of research has been a longstanding passion for Waran.
She was appointed last year by the F茅d茅ration Equestre Internationale (FEI), the world governing body for horse sport, to chair the Independent Equine Ethics and Wellbeing Commission.
A trip to Switzerland saw her present to the FEI Sports Forum on the Commission鈥檚 proposed vision, and draft recommendations on the current and future societal concerns related to the ethics and welfare of horse use in sport.
Waran has also been invited to present to both the New Zealand Thoroughbred Racing Welfare Forum at the end of May in Cambridge, and also at the New Zealand Equestrian Sports鈥 members鈥 forum in Christchurch in July.
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