Mares grazing endophyte-infected () tall fescue () typically exhibit reproductive dysfunction rather than problems associated with peripheral vasoconstriction as a primary sign of the fescue toxicosis syndrome. Research using Doppler ultrasonography demonstrated that consumption of endophyte-infected tall fescue seed causes measurable vasoconstriction in the medial palmar artery. The objective of this study was to evaluate contractile responses of medial palmar artery and vein to increasing concentrations of various tall fescue alkaloids. Medial palmar arteries and veins were collected immediately following euthanasia from 23 horses of mixed breed, age, and gender from both forelimbs, and uterine arteries were collected from females ( = 12). Vessels were separated, cleaned of excess connective and adipose tissue, divided into 2- to 3-mm cross-sections, and suspended in a multimyograph chamber with continuously oxygenated Krebs-Henseleit buffer (95% O/5% CO; pH 7.4; 37°C). Following a 90-min equilibration and recovery from reference compound exposure, increasing concentrations of norepinephrine, 5-hydroxytryptamine, ergotamine, and ergonovine for the palmar artery and vein and uterine artery and ergovaline, ergocryptine, ergocristine, ergocornine, and lysergic acid for the palmar artery and vein were added to assess vasoactivity. Data were normalized as a percentage of contractile response induced by the reference compound addition and analyzed as a completely randomized design. Both norepinephrine and serotonin were vasoactive in all 3 types of blood vessels. Neither ergotamine nor ergonovine were vasoactive in the uterine artery. All alkaloids tested with the palmar artery and vein produced a contractile response, except that neither the palmar artery nor the palmar vein responded to lysergic acid ( > 0.05). Ergovaline was the most vasoactive ergot alkaloid in both the palmar artery and the palmar vein ( < 0.05) followed by ergonovine, whereas out of the 4 remaining ergopeptine alkaloids tested, ergocristine induced the lowest contractile response. Although horses do not outwardly appear to be affected by peripheral vasoconstriction as observed in cattle, these data indicate that tall fescue alkaloids are vasoactive and suggest that potential exists for peripheral vascular effects of tall fescue alkaloids in horses. This does not appear to be the case for the uterine artery, and future research should be directed at understanding how ergot alkaloids cause equine reproductive dysfunction.