Drones reveal how feral horse units keep boundaries
Drone analysis reveals how horse groups dynamically adjust their formation to maintain boundaries, with the discovery of one exceptional "friendly pair."
2026-01-21
(Press-News.org)
For social animals, encounters between rival groups can often lead to conflict. While some species avoid this by maintaining fixed territories, others, like the feral horses, live in a "multilevel society" where multiple family groups (units) aggregate to form higher level group. Aggregating is considered to offer protection against predators and bachelor males, but it also brings rival males into close contact. The horses face a dilemma: they want to group together for safety but need to maintain distance to avoid fighting. How they navigate this constant balance in a fluid environment has remained unclear.
A research team led by Kyoto University used drones to observe 25 units of horses in Serra D’Arga, Portugal. A total of 166 observations were conducted and units never mixed with one exception. To determine if this spacing was simply due to chance, the team performed a randomization analysis. They compared the observed data against a randomized data. The results showed that real horses statistically avoided being near other units and, even when close, actively prevented mixing. This confirms that their spatial structure is a deliberate strategy to maintain social order.
The study further revealed that horses dynamically change their unit’s shape based on the distance to neighbors. When the nearest unit distance was small, the unit became more rounded, presumably to avoid the areas of the other units. When another unit further approached, the shape of the unit became thinner such that the boundary of the units would not cross.
While strict avoidance was observed for most of the units, the team discovered a striking exception: a unit led by a male named "Kobe" and another by a male named "Uzumasa." Unlike any other pair, these two units frequently approached each other and mixed their members (21 times out of 59 observations). This behavior was consistent, having also been observed in 2016. Such high social tolerance between specific units has never been reported in this habitat or others. It suggests a unique relationship exists exclusively between these two groups.
This study highlights how animals in shared spaces maintain order through dynamic spatial adjustment rather than fixed boundaries. By constantly adjusting their distance and shape, horses balance the benefits and costs of group living.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2026-01-21
Researchers from the University of St Andrews have developed an AI tool that reads animal movement from video and turns it into clear, human-readable descriptions, making behavioural analysis faster, cheaper, and scalable across species.
Published on Wednesday 21 January by The Royal Society, the PoseR plug has been developed to remove a major bottleneck in neuroscience, psychology and biology to enable larger faster, and more reproducible studies.
Animal behaviour ...
2026-01-21
New research from the University of St Andrews has found that the social spread of group bubble-net feeding amongst humpback whales is crucial to the success of the population’s ongoing recovery.
Bubble-net feeding is when a group of whales work together to blow clouds of bubbles that corral their small fish prey schools into higher densities that they can then engulf together. It is a cooperative and highly social behaviour that requires whales to learn how to work in a group.
The study published today (Wednesday ...
2026-01-21
A long-standing mystery about how wild bats navigate complex environments in complete darkness with remarkable precision, has been solved in a new University of Bristol-led study. The findings are published today [21 January] in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
While it is well known that bats hunting at night use biosonar (also known as echolocation) to map their surroundings, the question of how they process thousands of overlapping echoes in real time when navigating more complex habitats like forests ...
2026-01-21
A new study reveals that urban tributaries flowing through Wuhan are significant sources of phthalate esters, a widely used class of plastic chemicals, to the Yangtze River, highlighting previously underestimated risks to aquatic ecosystems in one of the world’s largest river systems.
Phthalate esters, often abbreviated as PAEs, are chemicals commonly added to plastics to make them flexible and durable. They are found in everyday products ranging from packaging and construction materials to personal care items and medical devices. Because these chemicals are not chemically ...
2026-01-21
The number of people over 40 in the UK living with glaucoma—the leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide—is already higher than expected and is projected to surge to more than 1.6 million by 2060, finds research published online in the British Journal of Ophthalmology.
This is equivalent to a rise of 60% on 2025 figures, and outpaces the projected 28% population increase in the over 40s over the same period, say the researchers.
This trend will be driven by an increasingly ageing population and growth in the proportion of higher risk ethnically diverse groups, prompting the need for an expansion in eye health services ...
2026-01-21
Preventing high blood glucose (pre-diabetes) from turning into type 2 diabetes with lifestyle changes could more than halve the carbon footprint associated with treating the complications of the disease, suggests a modelling study, published in the open access journal BMJ Open.
And effective management of the disease could cut greenhouse gas emissions by 21%, the calculations indicate.
In 2021, 537 million adults around the globe were living with diabetes, a number that is expected to rise to 783 million by 2045, 4.41 million of whom will be in the UK, note the researchers.
Diabetes ...
2026-01-21
Over one million people are estimated to currently have glaucoma in the UK, a figure projected to reach more than 1.6 million by 2060, according to a study led by UCL and Moorfields researchers.
The new figures, published in the British Journal of Ophthalmology and commissioned by Glaucoma UK, are nearly 50% higher than previous estimates of glaucoma prevalence. The researchers say there could be more than half a million people with undiagnosed glaucoma - a common eye condition in which the optic nerve, which connects the eye to the brain, becomes damaged - in the ...
2026-01-21
Treating people who are at high risk of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) can delay the onset of the disease for several years, with benefits also continuing well after treatment has stopped.
The trial showed that one year of treatment with the drug abatacept, a biologic therapy that targets immune cell activation, reduced progression to rheumatoid arthritis in people at high risk.
The new King’s College London study, published in The Lancet Rheumatology, builds on results from a trial led reported by King’s researchers ...
2026-01-21
A landmark UK study involving tens of thousands of families has shown that childhood screening for type 1 diabetes is effective, laying the groundwork for a UK-wide childhood screening programme.
Results from the first phase of the ELSA (Early Surveillance for Autoimmune diabetes) study, co-funded by charities Diabetes UK and Breakthrough T1D, are published today in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology.
The findings mark a major step towards a future in which ...
2026-01-21
Regularly doing a mix of different types of physical activity may be best for prolonging the lifespan, but the associations aren’t linear, pointing to a possible optimal threshold effect, suggests research published in the open access journal BMJ Medicine.
Variety rather than simply doing more of the same, is linked to a lower risk of death irrespective of total quantity, the findings show, although an active lifestyle is still important in its own right, emphasise the researchers.
While physical activity has consistently been associated with better physical and mental health and a lower risk of death, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Drones reveal how feral horse units keep boundaries
Drone analysis reveals how horse groups dynamically adjust their formation to maintain boundaries, with the discovery of one exceptional "friendly pair."