Research into the colour of racecourse jumps have now
been published. It was commissioned by the British Horseracing Authority (BHA)
and Racing Foundation with the aim of making obstacles easier for horses to see,
and so reducing the risk of falls and injuries for horses and jockeys.
The main findings have been made available
previously, but now the full report has been published in Applied Animal
Behaviour Science.
Horses see colours differently from humans. Humans
and other primates have three types of light-responsive cells (cones) in their
eyes, giving what is called trichromatic colour vision. Normal human eyes
detect four basic colours: red, green, yellow and blue. They can also
differentiate up to 100 subtle variations in hue. Humans with red-green colour
vision defects can only see two basic colours - yellow and blue.
Proposed new colours to make jumps more visible to horses |
Currently, orange is used on hurdle frames and
fence take-off boards and guard-rails. Although this makes the fences stand out
to human eyes, it is unlikely that it makes the obstacle more visible to horses.
The study, conducted by Dr. Sarah
Paul and Professor Martin Stevens of the Centre for Ecology and
Conservation, University of Exeter, looked at the visibility to horses of a
range of colours, and then examined the horses’ response to the presence of different
colours on racecourse fences.
They analysed the contrast of traditional orange markers
currently used on fences from 11 UK racecourses, and compared this to possible
alternatives: yellow blue and white. They also investigated how light and
weather conditions affected contrast.
The researchers found that yellow, blue, and white were
more conspicuous against fences and their surroundings (foreground/background)
than orange.
Highly luminant whites or blues at the base of the
fence (take-off board) gave the best contrast, while fluorescent yellow gave
the greatest contrast against the main fence body (i.e. when used for midrail
colour) in different light and weather conditions.
Paul and Stevens then tested the
jumping responses of horses to fences with orange, yellow, blue, or white
take-off boards and guard rails.
They found that the colour of the fences could
influence both the angle that horses jump a fence and the length of the jump.
Horses adjusted their jump angles with colours other than orange, and white
tended to produce a longer total jump distance.
The researchers suggest that the optimum colour
combination, which is likely to combine the best features of visibility and
horse responses under a range of conditions, is to use fluorescent yellow for
all hurdles and guard-rails, and fluorescent white for take-off boards. This
maximises visibility under all conditions while potentially facilitating better
behavioural responses.
In response to this study, a recommendation was
approved by the sport's Racecourse Committee for a trial using fluorescent
yellow for all hurdles and guard-rails, and fluorescent white for take-off
boards at fences.
For
more details, see:
Horse
vision and obstacle visibility in horseracing.
Paul
SC, Stevens M.
Appl
Anim Behav Sci. 2020:104882.
1 comment:
All very well but only as good as the jockey positioning the horse so it has time to see the fence, instead of having it’s head wedged up the bottom of the horse in front.
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