Vision in the Equine (2024)

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Vision in the Equine (2)

The horse is a prey animal, relying on their senses to assess their environment. Prey species are designed for scanning the environment compared to picking out sharp details. By scanning larger areas, prey is safer from a surprise attack from a predator. Horses use vision to orientate themselves, detect motion and distance, and evaluate the consistency of the environment. The equine eye is eight times larger than human eyes placed on the sides of their head. The position of the eyes on the horse’s face accounts for differences in how horses see, dictate visual range, peripheral motion detection and depth perception. A horses’ ability to see depth is limited because their eyes are set so far apart. From most angles, horses cannot get a left-eye and right-eye view of the same object in one glance. Unlike humans, the horse is able to see images to the left and right at the same time due to the eyes being at the side of the head.

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The eye of the horse set to the side of the face

The cornea is the surface of the clear part of the eye and the colored part of the eye is the iris. Eyelids are a thin ring of two layers of muscles that relax and contract to open and close the eye. The third eyelid is a pink membrane that moves over the eye from the inside corner to the outside corner. In combination with the upper and lower eyelid, all three function to protect the eye. Eyelids have tear glands that keep the eye moist. The nasolacrimal duct drains the tears to a small opening just inside the nostril. An unusual feature of the equine eye is the corpora nigra. It is a knobby structure that juts out from the top of the iris and functions to shade the pupil from glare.

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Parts of the horses eye

The retina is the major determinant of vision. The horse has a rectangular pupil shape which extends the area of visual perception. The size of the pupil determines the amount of light allowed into the back part of the eye. Pupils contract under bright light and enlarge in low light. Compared to other animals, horses have lots of cells in their retinas and have fairly good vision. Horses are thought to have vision somewhere in the range of 20/30 to 20/60. Cones are required for bright light (day light) vision, and rods are required for dim light vision. The horse’s ratio of rods to cones is approximately 20:1, compared to people who have a ratio of 9:1. Thus, equine retinas are designed to detect motion even in low-lighting conditions. The retina also contains cones, or cells that sense color. Humans have three types of cones, which sense red, yellow-green, and blue light. Horses can see only two of the visible wavelengths in the light spectrum because they have only blue-sensitive cone cells and yellow-sensitive cone cells. Thus, they see blue, green, and variations of the two colors, but do not see red or shades of red.

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Visible Sprectum Between Humans and Horses

The horse's night vision is superior to humans due to the tapetum lucidum, which enhances visual sensitivity under low light conditions. When light enters the eye, it triggers a photoreceptor on the retina, which is reflected by the tapetum to trigger additional receptors. As a result, the horse is able to see at lower light levels but the reflections also blur images by reducing the resolution. Because light is magnified, the pupil must constrict more during sunlight to protect the eye. This may cause the horse difficulty in identifying details and smaller objects and moving ones may trigger the flight response. Horses’ eyes are not adept at making a quick transition between bright and dark locations. This explains why horses are sometimes reluctant to enter dark places, such as a unfamiliar building, stall or trailer.

Horses are equipped to be highly aware of peripheral motion. The motion of anything causes the horse to register what it is (a survival mechanism for the prey animal). Anything that moves, regardless of what it is, may cause the horse to initiate the flight response before a predator begins to approach. Horses use two-forms of vision, monocular and binocular. Monocular vision allows the horse to see on both sides of his head, meaning the left eye and the right eye work independently and see different views. Each eye sees across an arc of approximately 200–210 degrees around the body at one time. The monocular fields straight in front of the horse’s face overlap slightly resulting in a binocular field between 65 and 80 degrees. The binocular field is responsible for depth perception. A horse’s depth perception is considerably less than for humans. Because of their vision capabilities allowing for a panoramic view, it is impossible to sneak up on a horse.

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Binocular and Monocular Field of Vision in a Horse

The blind area is directly behind the animal’s head and body and has an arc of approximately 20 degrees. The front blind spot is directly under the head, immediately in front of the forehead and below the body in front of the horse’s face. A horse can’t see what they eat (grass they graze or grain in the bucket), fingers that stroke their muzzle or even the bit they accept in their mouths. If a person raises a hand suddenly, they appear to the horse to come out of nowhere. Standing directly behind a horse, the animal can’t see you, thus when surprised from behind, a horse may kick you. For safety reasons, it is always best to make sure the horse knows you are there.

All the horse has to do is change its head position and they can increase their visual horizons. If a horse lowers its head and moves it slightly from side to side, a horse can easily scan a 360-degree horizontal periphery. To focus on distant objects, a horse raises its head. When the horses head is held perpendicular to the ground, a horse’s visual field is lowered, focusing less on distant objects and more on the immediate ground in front of the horse.

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When a horse raises its head, they use binocular vision to focus on distant objects

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A horse with the head held vertically, the binocular focus will be on objects near its feet

Compared to humans, horses vision has the following characteristics:

  • Horses can detect the appearance of objects within an almost fully encompassing circle and are able to identify objects within most but not all of their panoramic field of view.
  • The horse may startle when an object passes from the field of vision from one eye to the other eye. For example, you take your dog with on a trail ride. The dog falls behind and jogs to catch up. The horse recognizes the dog on the left but when the dog moves over to the right side the horse jumps unexpectantly.
  • Horses are less able to distinguish details and contrast colors
  • Horses can see longer distances and can view the horizon and ground at the same time
  • Horses are easily blinded by bright light but can see better in dim light
  • Horses recognize patterns or outlines. For example, a horse is trail-ridden down a gravel road with no problem. The next time the horse is ridden down the gravel road there are garbage cans out by each drive and the horse spooks at the garbage can. This is most likely due to the garbage can being out of place. It was not there before and now it is a new item to be assessed.
  • Horses detect movement quickly. For example, you and a horse are trail riding, when a deer quite a way down the trail runs across the trail. The horse sees the movement of the deer and may react by trying to turn the other direction, or even taking off at a run.

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Horse behavior

Vision in the Equine (2024)

FAQs

Vision in the Equine? ›

The position of the eyes in the skull of a horse allows for a wide, panoramic view. Their visual field is enormous (up to 350°) and provides nearly a complete sphere of vision with few small “blind spots”.

What is the equine field of vision? ›

The position of the eyes in the skull of a horse allows for a wide, panoramic view. Their visual field is enormous (up to 350°) and provides nearly a complete sphere of vision with few small “blind spots”.

How is a horse's vision different from human vision? ›

The numbers don't tell us much until we use them for comparison. A typical horse's acuity is about 20/30. Details we can see from a distance of 30 feet, he can only see from 20 feet. A horse has to be 50 percent closer to see the same details.

What is a horse's line of vision? ›

It is located very laterally, on the sides of the head, and its pupil is horizontal. All this contributes to a panoramic field of vision, extremely wide in a horizontal plane. Without moving his head, the horse can see 340 degrees around him at the same time. His blind spots are behind his rump and under his nose.

How far can a horse see? ›

Their range of vision is about 300 degrees, except for an area of about three feet directly in front of and six feet behind them. binocular, just like humans, and he gains some depth perception. In order to bring objects into focus, the horse will move his head up or down. Horses have a complex eye to brain structure.

What is a horse's sense of vision? ›

Horse eyes are among the largest of any land mammal, and are positioned on the sides of the head (that is, they are positioned laterally). This means horses have a range of vision of about 350°, with approximately 65° of this being binocular vision and the remaining 285° monocular vision.

What animal has the best vision? ›

Eagles have the best eyesight in the animal kingdom and can spot and focus on prey up to 2 miles away. Although eagles weigh only around 10 pounds, eagle eyes are roughly the same size as human eyes. Humans with healthy eyes have 20/20 vision, but hawks have 20/4 or 20/5 vision.

Can horses see in the dark? ›

Horses have excellent night vision, and on a night lit by a partial moon or by bright stars alone, normally sighted horses can see as well as you do in full daylight. In moonlight, horses can see as well as humans do in the sunlight.

What is unique about horses eyes? ›

The horse's large globes and pupilary structure allow the eyes to capture the maximum amount of light possible in low- lighting conditions. Horses' pupils are oblique in shape and positioned horizontally within the eye, which optimizes the animals' ability to scan horizons.

How do horses view humans? ›

Horses undoubtedly recognize humans and other creatures as different kinds of animals. Whether they see us as potentially dangerous depends on their prior experiences. Sometimes horses truly appreciate the camaraderie of animals other than horses.

What color can horses not see? ›

Horses can see only two of the visible wavelengths in the light spectrum because they have only blue-sensitive cone cells and yellow-sensitive cone cells. Thus, they see blue, green, and variations of the two colors, but do not see red or shades of red.

Can a horse see the sky? ›

They have no particular need to look up because they have an incredibly wide field of vision both horizontally and vertically. They can see 'grass to sky' without having to raise their heads higher than usual.

How do you read a horse's eyes? ›

Eye Body Language

The white part of your horse's eye is called the sclera. Be careful if you see the sclera of your horses' eyes showing. It means he is afraid, startled, or very nervous. A happy and relaxed horse will have his eyes wide open, but the sclera not showing.

Do horses recognize their owners? ›

Many scientific investigations have shown that horses have a kind of long-term memory that allows them to recognize the individuals who previously owned them. Experiments conducted over several years have shown that horses remember their owners in the same way that they remember other horses.

Can horses sense fear in a person? ›

While they don't exactly "smell" fear like we'd sniff out freshly baked pie, they're incredibly adept at picking up on our physiological changes. So, if you're jittery, your horse will probably mirror that nervous energy, becoming more skittish and alert. Remember, it's all about the bond; they feel what you feel!

Do horses see you bigger than you are? ›

Do horses see things bigger? Horses eyes are eight times larger than human eyes, just as some other mammals' eyes are. Due to this, horse's eyeballs have oversized retinas which magnify everything a horse sees. For a horse, up-close objects look 50 per cent larger than they appear to humans.

Do horses have a nearly 360 degree field of vision? ›

Although horses have a nearly 360-degree field of vision (almost four times what humans experience), it's reduced by about five degrees on each side for a 350-degree panorama that's helpful in the wild for prey animals. Those huge seemingly all-seeing equine eyes come with blind spots, however.

Do horses have a limited visual field? ›

Horses have a nearly panoramic field of vision due to their eyes being on each side of their head, estimated to be around 350 degrees with only a small blind spot immediately behind them. This means they can see almost all the way around them without moving their heads.

What is the spiritual meaning of seeing a horse? ›

The horse's spiritual energy reminds us that in unity, we find strength, and in trust, we foster profound connections that enrich our lives. The horse, a symbol of grandeur, calls upon us to embrace the nobility within ourselves. Its presence ignites the fire of self-belief and the recognition of our inherent worth.

What is the vision of the horsem*n? ›

Christianity interprets the Four Horsem*n as a vision of harbingers of the Last Judgment, setting a divine end-time upon the world.

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