It makes no difference if mares and geldings are together when a mare is in heat. A gelding is a castrated horse and he has no sex drive or ability to impregnate a mare. Therefore a gelding would be like just another horse to a mare in heat.
yes
About 57-67% of Thoroughbreds are geldings, and in saying Thoroughbreds I mean the racing one's. There are more pet Thoroughbred mares then geldings but there are more racing Geldings then mares, the reason for this is because the geldings run more from their front legs then their butts and mares run more from their butt's. Most trainers want their horses to race from their front legs because it means they can run faster although this causes major damage to the legs, Mares have it alot easier in racing if they have a GOOD "horse-wise" trainer who will let them run they way they are created to ran.
Stallion is a gender, meaning male. Mares are females, and geldings are casterated (gelded) males.
Yes, and I have heard that this is actually good for the colt because the mares will teach him better manners than if he was left with other colts.
Geldings will do this sometimes when they are almost finished urinating. Mares usually like to stand in one place.
They are male- with 3 exceptions in history.
No. Baby horses are called foals. The boys are colts and girls are fillies. When they mature, the females are mares and the males are geldings or stallions.
Domestic mares and geldings aren't very territorial, wild horses being animals who roam. They are more concerned about other horses like their offspring, or in a stallion's case, his mares.
As a general rule, most mares get moody when they come in heat. Stallions are also generally as less well-behaved than mares in estrus, mostly because of the fact that their hormones start raging when they smell a female in heat. Geldings on the other hand, are generally the best tempered type of horse out there because they have been castrated and do not have the raging hormone issue going on like mares and stallions do. However, every horse is different. Some mares will be better than some stallions, some stallions will be better than geldings, and some mares will be better than some geldings. It all depends on how they've been socialized and trained that really depicts how well-tempered they can be.
When you talk about male, it depends on whether you are talking about gelding or stallion. In the stallion's case, then yes, the stallion is more aggressive. The majority of geldings are very calm. Between geldings and mares, mares are often more aggressive because they can get more moody. But over all, it really depends on the horse.
Adult female horses are called mares. Adult male horses are called geldings (castrated) or stallions (not castrated or uncut).
"Stallion" is the technical term for a male horse, that has not been castrated. The males that have been castrated, are called Geldings, and female horses are called Mares.