Mares cycle when days are long and there is abundant daylight during most of the day, meaning that under normal circumstances, they cycle in the Spring, Summer and Fall. Mares do not cycle in Winter when daylight is short; this is known as anestrus. During anestrus, the uterus is flaccid, and the ovaries are inactive with no significant follicles or corpora lutea. The cervix may be closed but not firm and tight, or it may be thin, short, and dilated.1
As the length of daylight increases with the onset of Spring, the ovaries become active once again. Their cycle resumes, and the ovaries begin to produce follicles, but ovulation does not occur immediately. "Mares have three or four prolonged intervals of estrus (periods of sexual receptivity to the stallion) during the vernal transition, but ovulation does not occur. The end of vernal transition is marked by a surge of luteinizing hormone and subsequent ovulation. After this ovulation, the first 21-day interovulatory period of that breeding season occurs and a regular estrous cycle is established."1
Reproductive Life of the Mare | |
Sexual maturity | Approx 18 months |
Estrous cycle | 22 days |
Estrus (fertile) length | 6 to 8 days |
Diestrus (not fertile) length | 14 to 16 days |
Gestation period | 340 days |
Postpartum heat | 7 days after parturition |
Mares have two follicular waves each cycle. Although the mare continues to ovulate regularly every 21 days throughout the breeding season, the length of estrus varies, ranging from two to eight days, and the length of diestrus varies accordingly to maintain a 21-day interval.1 Early in the breeding season, estrus tends to be longer, whereas around the summer solstice the mare may be sexually receptive for only two to three days.
"In horses, a breeding is only as effective as your ability to predict a mare’s impending ovulation."2 That said, there are a plethora of factors that impact the mare's cycle, when she will ovulate, and the approximate lengths of time before, during and after ovulation.
Other than the mare's general health and diet, these factors include:
Finally, if the mare has been given prostaglandins or other agents to induce ovulation, schedules must be adjusted accordingly, since this will bring on earlier ovulation.
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