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Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

 

The Genetic Origin and History of Speed in the Thoroughbred Racehorse

February 08, 2012 / (4) comments


I seem to have genetics on the brain lately. I’ve written a couple of posts about the evolution of the domestic dog, and now I just have to tell you about a paper outlining the genetic origins of Thoroughbred race horses that I came across today.

 

First, a little background as to why I’m so excited about this topic: I was the typical horse-crazy young girl. My parents couldn’t indulge my fantasy of having my own horse (I had to wait until I was 30 to be able to satisfy that dream on my own), but they did pay for riding lessons, horse camps, and as many books about horses as I could read. Through my "research," I came to understand that all Thoroughbreds alive today originated from one of three foundation stallions. To quote from Racing Through the Century by Mary Simon:

 

In the time of Charles II, England’s cold-blooded native horses were bred primarily for work and war, an increasingly unsatisfactory situation in a sporting sense. British horsemen attempted to resolve this by importing stallions of exceptional beauty from the deserts of the Middle East to cross with local mares. The result of this selective breeding program over time was a refined, fleet-footed equine possessed of strength, speed, stamina, and competitive fire — all the ingredients one could possibly want in a race horse.

Three importations made following the reign of Charles II deserve particular mention. In 1688, Captain Robert Byerly captured an elegant black stallion from a Turkish officer at the Hungarian siege of Buda and brought him home as a spoil of war. Sixteen years later, British consul Thomas Darley smuggled a handsome Arabian colt out of the Syrian Desert and into the county of Yorkshire. And around 1729 a mysterious horse of romantically obscure Eastern lineage appeared at the Earl of Godolphin’s stud near Cambridge. These, of course, were the Byerly Turk, the Darley Arabian, and the Godolphin Barb, foundation sires of the modern Thoroughbred racehorse.

 

Ahh, such romance and intrigue … what a great origin story. Except it turns out that it’s not the whole truth.

A team of researchers analyzed the pedigrees and genetic makeup of "593 horses from 22 Eurasian and North-American horse populations, museum specimens from 12 historically important Thoroughbred stallions (b.1764–1930), 330 elite-performing modern Thoroughbreds and 42 samples from three other equid species" and published their results in Nature Communications. Their work revealed that a genetic mutation (the C-variant) in the myostatin gene is responsible for a Thoroughbreds’ speed at relatively short distances.

According to lead researcher Emmeline Hill of University College Dublin, "The results show that the 'speed gene' entered the Thoroughbred from a single founder, which was most likely a British mare about 300 years ago, when local British horse types were the pre-eminent racing horses prior to the formal foundation of the Thoroughbred racehorse."

So, it turns out that a mare is at least as responsible for the Thoroughbred racehorse’s speed as are the three dashing "gentlemen" from the desert. Hold your heads high, fillies!

 

 

Dr. Jennifer Coates

 

 

Image: Zuzule / via Shutterstock

 

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COMMENTS (4)
1
Smuggling
by on 02/08/2012 06:32am

"British consul Thomas Darley smuggled a handsome Arabian colt out of the Syrian Desert and into the county of Yorkshire."

I'd love to know how an entire horse, albeit a colt, was successfully smuggled out of a country. That has to be an impressive story. (Maybe it was in a diplomatic pouch?)

by on 02/09/2012 04:32pm

A little baksheesh could have lubricated the colt's exit from Araby.

2
Wonderful Picture
by on 02/08/2012 09:36am

Love Horses, had a 3 in my life-time, But { The Ten Commandments are not Multiple Choice ] I do not care Who you are No-One has the right to take, what belongs to another.

3
how fitting
by on 02/08/2012 04:32pm

What an especially delightful thing to learn given the strong showing by fillies and mares over the last two or three years--Zenyatta and Rachel Alexandra, but also Royal Delta, Harve de Grace, Goldikova, Awesome Feather, etc :-)

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About fully vetted

Jennifer Coates, DVM

Photo of Dr Coates

Image credit: Jim Piraino

...graduated with honors from the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine in 1999. In the years since, she has practiced veterinary medicine in Virginia, Wyoming, and Colorado. She is the author of several books about veterinary medicine and animal care, including the Dictionary of Veterinary Terms: Vet-Speak Deciphered for the Non-Veterinarian. Dr. Coates also writes short stories that focus on the strength and importance of the human-animal bond, and freelance articles relating to a variety of animal care and veterinary topics. Dr. Coates lives in Fort Collins, Colorado with her husband, daughter, and various species of pets.

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