Why Don't Horses Sit Or Lie Down Even While Sleeping?
Maybe your like
Faculty of Sciences, Engineering and Technology
Site Menu
- Home
- About Us
- Diversity & Inclusion
- Our People
- Study With Us
- Majors & Specialisations
- 2025 B.Sc (Veterinary Bioscience) Admissions Guide
- Bridging Courses
- Short Courses
- Centre for STEM Education and Innovation
- Prizes and Scholarships
- Honours
- Careers & Employability
- Research Career Opportunities
- Internships
- Architecture, Landscape Architecture and Construction Management Internships
- Computer and Mathematical Sciences
- Engineering Internships
- Engineering Internship Course
- Flagship Projects
- Sciences Internships
- Mentors & Volunteers
- Our Research
- Research Institutes & Centres
- Facilities & Services
- Higher Degrees by Research
- Information for HDR Students
- Engage With Us
- Alumni
- Partner With Us
- Teacher & School Resources
- Work With Our Students
- Internship Information for Hosts
- News
- Events
- Sir Ronald Fisher Lecture
- Home
- SET
- News
- 2019
- 05
- 08
- Current: Why don’t horses sit or lie down even while sleeping?
Horses have an amazing ability to be able to sleep standing up. But they do also sleep lying down. If you’re a horse, you need to be able to do both.
Why don’t horses sit or lie down even while sleeping?A question from Zulfiqar
It's one of the mistakes lots of people make about horses. It’s true they do have an amazing ability to sleep standing up. But they do also sleep lying down. If you’re a horse, you need to be able to do both.
Animal behaviour expert Dr Susan Hazel explains why.
Horses have evolved to be able to run at almost any moment, in case a predator arrives. Flickr/Cowboy Dave CC BY-ND 2.0
Why should horses be able to sleep standing up?
Horses first evolved in open plains. As a prey species (one that other animals eat), they needed to be able to see quickly if another animal that might eat them (a predator) was nearby.
Being able to rest or sleep standing up meant they could get their rest, but if they saw a predator, they could quickly run away. That’s one of the reasons horses run so fast - to get away. The early horses that ran the fastest were more likely to survive.
Three legs on, one leg off
Horses can rest standing up or lying down. Flickr/Cowboy Dave CC BY-ND 2.0
The most interesting part of horses resting standing up is how they do it. In horses there is a special arrangement of muscles and the parts that connect muscles and bones together (ligaments and tendons). This is called the stay apparatus.
The stay apparatus means that horses can stand on three legs and rest the other leg. They can change the leg they rest so all of their legs get a chance to have a break. A horse can weigh more than 500kg so their legs need a rest!
Even though they can sleep standing up, scientists think horses still need to lie down and sleep each day. Your sleep is not the same all night. Everyone goes through different stages of lighter and deeper sleep, and horses are the same.
The deeper stages of sleep are only seen in horses lying down. Both horses and humans need to go through deeper stages of sleep for our brains to work properly.
top
Tag » How Does A Horse Sleep
-
Interesting Facts About How Horses Sleep - I Heart Horses
-
Why Do Horses Sleep Standing Up? | Britannica
-
How Do Horses Sleep?
-
How Do Horses Sleep? | Animal Friends
-
Do Horses Sleep Standing Up? - PetMD
-
Do You Know How Horses Sleep? - The Spruce Pets
-
How Do Horses Sleep And Rest | Sleep Matters Club - Dreams
-
Why Do Horses Sleep Standing Up? - Equestrian Co.
-
Do Horses Sleep Standing Up? Or Do They Prefer To Lay Down...
-
How Do Horses Sleep & Do They Sleep Standing Up?
-
How Horses Sleep: A To Zzzz Guide To To Equine Rest - Horse Rookie
-
Do Horses Sleep Standing Up? | Wonderopolis
-
How Does A Horse Sleep?