Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Reining in the Wild Horses Data & story from DASL Reference: Eagle, Asa, Garrot et al. (1993). Wildlife Society Bulletin, 21(2), 116-121. Research Question: Will sterilization of the dominant male in a wild horse herd reduce foaling (birth) rates for 2 or more years?
2
Background December 1985: Dominant male in wild horse bands from two Herd Management Areas vasectomized. Control group male left untreated June 1986 – July 1988: aerial survey of bands 3-4 times a year to record number of adults and foals in the treated and untreated bands
3
Data Analysis Data entered into SPSS Explore command used to produce descriptive statistics for treated and untreated groups Clustered Bar graphs created to display findings.
4
Program Effectiveness Mean number of foals in the sterilized bands was 5 (range of 1 to 17) compared to a mean of 26 (range of 16 to 39) in the untreated bands Treatment effect was observed in both herds
5
Adjustment for Herd Size Mean number of adults differed in the treated and untreated groups (M(trt) = 46 adults vs. M(untrt) = 174) Calculate number of foals/number of adults to adjust for this
6
Conclusions Sterilization of dominant male in herd reduced average number of births by 21 foals per season (26 down to 5) Adjusted for herd size, this represents a decrease from 1 foal per 15 adults (0.15) down to 1 foal per 10 adults (0.10) Over time, this decrease in birth-rate will improve herd health and grazing land condition
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.