Abstract

The reasons for Thoroughbred (TB) horses not entering training or exiting the racing industry, are of interest to regulators, welfare groups and the broader community. Speculation about the outcomes of these horses threatens the community acceptance, or social license, of the TB breeding and racing industries. A representative survey of the 2010 Victorian born TB foal crop was used to determine the outcomes and reasons for exit for horses that had not entered training, or had exited training and racing by eight years of age. Horses exported for racing or breeding (4%), or that were still actively racing (7%) at the start of the follow up period were excluded from the study. An online questionnaire was sent to breeders or trainers of 3,176 TB horses eligible for enrolment in the study. Of the 2,005 (63%) responses received, the two most frequent outcomes were that the horse had either been retired or rehomed (65%), or deceased (16%). For the 1,637 TB horses that had entered training, the majority of retirements were voluntary (59%), followed by involuntary retirements due to health disorders (28%). For TBs that did not have an industry record of entering training (n = 368), death (34%), or retirement or being rehomed (27%), were the most frequent barriers to entering training. The median age of retirement for TBs that raced was five (Q1 4; Q3 6) years regardless of sex, or whether their first race start was at two, three or four years of age. Relatively large numbers of horses voluntarily retiring at five-years of age suggests that industry-level, rather than individual horse-level factors are the predominant influences on racing career duration.

Highlights

  • The Australian Thoroughbred (TB) industry is an important component of the Victorian (VIC) and broader Australian economies, contributing more than $1.5 billion Australian dollars (AUD) to the VIC economy alone [1, 2]

  • Horses recorded by Racing Australia (RA) or the ASB as exported for racing or breeding purposes, or that were still active within Australia on 1 August 2018, and that had participated in a trial or race between 1 February 2018 and 31 July 2018 (n = 379) were excluded from enrolment in the study (Fig 1)

  • As nine horses with no official record of training, were reported to be participating in the racing industry in the 2018– 2019 racing season, combined with 20 untrained horses reported as retiring due to poor performance and 11 untrained horses whose circumstance of death were during training/pre-training, this study identified that official records underestimate the number of horses recorded in training at licensed premises in Australia

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Summary

Introduction

The Australian Thoroughbred (TB) industry is an important component of the Victorian (VIC) and broader Australian economies, contributing more than $1.5 billion Australian dollars (AUD) to the VIC economy alone [1, 2]. Barrier to entering training and drivers of exit for Victorian Thoroughbreds

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