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US Jockey Club presses on with study of annual stallion book size caps

Further considerations on cause and effects of decreasing gene pool diversity

25 per cent of mares in North America were bred to the 43 most popular stallions
25 per cent of mares in North America were bred to the 43 most popular stallionsCredit: Edward Whitaker

The Jockey Club board of stewards announced on Monday that it will continue its consideration of a rule to limit the annual breeding of individual stallions.

In September, the stewards requested industry feedback on a proposal to cap the number of mares bred per stallion to 140.

Motivating this change is a concern about the long-term effects of a relatively small number of stallions breeding an increasing percentage of all mares bred.

In 2019, 43 stallions bred books of 140 mares or more and the mares this group of stallions collectively covered accounted for 25 per cent of all mares bred in North America.

"The combination of these changes has resulted in a substantial increase in the percentage of foals produced by a discreet segment of stallions - signalling a worrisome concentration of the gene pool," the stewards said in a statement announcing the proposal.

"We are grateful for the many thoughtful comments in response to our September proposal," said Monday's statement from The Jockey Club.

"The stewards are considering those comments as we continue to study the cause and effects of decreasing diversity of the thoroughbred gene pool and finalise a rule to protect the breed's health and welfare."

The Jockey Club proposal recommended a phased-in approach as follows:

  • Stallions entering stud service for the first time in 2020 would be exempt from the 140 limit through the 2023 season.
  • Stallions that entered stud service in 2019 would be exempt through the 2022 season.
  • Stallions that entered stud service in 2018 would be exempt through the 2021 season.
  • Stallions that entered service in 2017 or prior would be subject to the 140 cap as of January 1, 2021.

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Published on 16 December 2019inNews

Last updated 23:24, 16 December 2019

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