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Categories: Horse News

How Horses Communicate with Their Ears

Horses communicate with their ears. You already know this. But a recent study shows just how important the ears are in horse-to-horse communication.



A paper on the subject by Jennifer Wathan and Karen McComb out of the University of Sussex was published in the journal Current Biology this week. It details their study on how horses receive information from the facial cues of other horses. In their paper, the authors point out that previous studies on the topic have focused on how head and eye direction are used in animal communication, but not much attention had been given to cues from the ears.



Equine ear-based communication is among the first things taught to budding equestrians. New riders are taught that forward ears indicate alertness, ears pinned back are a sign of irritation, and a content horse will usually have relaxed, slightly sideways ears. Other horses certainly recognize these cues from their herdmates; a lower-ranking horse knows to move away from a more dominant equine when the ears go back.

However, rather than looking at how horses indicate their emotional state through ear position, the University of Sussex study focused on how horses communicate through “social attention.” Because horses are herd animals, they rely on information received from their companions to know where to feed, when to flee, et cetera. This study examined how horses receive that information.

The researchers took photographs of horses in a pasture looking toward a feed bucket and created life-sized prints. Preliminary experiments in which the equine test subjects’ reactions to the photographs were compared with their reactions to control photos were performed to ensure that the test subjects recognized the photos as horses.

For their experiment, the researchers set up two feed buckets in front of one of the photographs with a horse’s head pointing to one of the two buckets. Each horse in the study was individually led in and released to freely choose which bucket to eat from.

In some of the photos, the horse’s eyes or ears were obscured by a mask. The researchers discovered that removing those eye or ear cues had a significant impact on the horse’s behavior. Approximately 75% of the horses chose the bucket indicated by the horse in the photograph when none of the cues were obscured. That number dropped to below 60 percent when the eyes were covered by a mask, and to 50% when the ears were covered.

Previous research had suggested that primates are the only animals that use eye direction to communicate information, but this study provides some evidence that horses do, too. And while horse people know that those big ears can communicate a lot of information, this study is one of the few in the topic of animal communication to demonstrate just how important ear cues are.

Liked this article? Here’s more info on how horses communicate:
Horse Body Language
How Horses Identify Humans
How to Speak Horse

The eyes and ears are visual indicators of attention in domestic horses. Wathan, Jennifer et al. Current Biology, Volume 24 , Issue 15 , R677 – R679


Leslie Potter is the Senior Associate Web Editor for horseillustrated.com. Follow her on Twitter: @LeslieInLex

Leslie Potter

Leslie Potter is a graduate of William Woods University where she earned a Bachelor of Science in Equestrian Science with a concentration in saddle seat riding and a minor in Journalism/Mass Communications. She is currently a writer and photographer in Lexington, Ky.Potter worked as a barn manager and riding instructor and was a freelance reporter and photographer for the Horsemen's Yankee Pedlar and Saddle Horse Report before moving to Lexington to join Horse Illustrated as Web Editor from 2008 to 2019. Her current equestrian pursuits include being a grown-up lesson kid at an eventing barn and trail riding with her senior Morgan gelding, Snoopy.

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