Przewalski's Horse (Equus ferus przewalskii or Equus caballus przewalskii, classification is debated), pronounced in English as //, also known as the Mongolian Wild Horse, or Takhi, is the closest living relative of the Domestic Horse. Poliakov, who concluded that the animal was a wild horse species, gave it the official name Equus przewalskii (Poliakov 1881). However, authorities differ about the correct classification. Some hold it is a separate species, the last remnant of Equus ferus, others hold it is a subspecies of Equus caballus. The question will only be answered with finality if or when the common ancestor from which domestic and Przewalski's horses diverged is determined."Przewalski's Horse," Smithsonian National Zoological Park, accessed June 25, 2006 Although the Przewalski's horse has 66 chromosomes, compared to 64 in a domestic horse, the Przewalski's horse and the domestic horse are the only equids that cross-breed and produce fertile offspring, possessing 65 chromosomes.The American Museum of Natural History When Is a Wild Horse Actually a Feral Horse?
As of 2005, the world population of these horses was about 1,500, all descended from 31 horses that were in captivity in 1945, mostly descended from approximately 15 captured around 1900. A cooperative venture between the Zoological Society of London and Mongolian Scientists has resulted in successful reintroduction of these horses from zoos into their natural habitat in Mongolia, and as of 2005 there is a free-ranging population of 248 animals in the wild.
The population declined in the 20th century due to a combination of factors, with the wild population in Mongolia dying out in the 1960s. The last herd was sighted in 1967 and the last individual horse in 1969. Expeditions after this failed to locate any horses, and the species was designated "extinct in the wild" for over 30 years.
In 1977, the "Foundation for the Preservation and Protection of the Przewalski Horse" was founded, which started a program of exchange between captive populations in zoos throughout the world to reduce inbreeding, and later starting a breeding program of its own. In 1992, sixteen horses were released into the wild in Mongolia, followed by additional animals later on. These reintroduced horses successfully reproduced, and the status of the animal was changed from "extinct in the wild" to "endangered" in 2005.
The area to which they were reintroduced became Hustai National Park in 1998.
Three of these horses now graze in a 49,000 square meter paddock in the Clocaenog Forest in North Wales, UK, on the site of a former Neolithic or Iron Age settlement. They were introduced there in 2004. The Forestry Commission hopes they will help recreate scenes from the Iron Age when these horses roamed Britain freely. Forestry Commission. 2004. FC Wales turns clock back thousands of years with 'wild' solution to looking after ancient forest site. News release, No: 7001, 16 September 2004. *
Przewalski's Horse is stockily built in comparison to domesticated horses, with shorter legs. Typical height is about 13 hands, length is about 2.1 m with a 90 cm tail. They weigh around 350 kg. The coat varies from dark brown around the mane (which stands erect) to pale brown on the flanks and yellowish-white on the belly, similar to Dun coloration in domestic horses. The legs of the Przewalski's Horse are often faintly striped [http://www.imh.org/imh/bw/prz.html, suggesting a possible shared distant evolutionary link to the zebra.
In the wild, Przewalski's Horses live in social groups consisting of a dominant male, several mares, and their offspring. Each group has a well-defined home range; within the range, the herd travels between three and six miles a day, spending time grazing, drinking, using salt licks, dozing, and taking mud baths. At night, the herd clusters and sleeps for about four hours.
Fillies and colts both leave their natal groups as they reach sexual maturity, usually driven out by the dominant stallion. Fillies generally look for a new herd to join, after which they will begin to reproduce. Colts usually find one another and spend a year or two in small bachelor herds. At around age 5, a stallion will leave the bachelor herd and attempt to take over an existing herd by challenging the dominant stallion, or by "stealing" one or more mares from another stallion's harem, or by gathering unattached fillies.
Equids | Natural history of Central Asia | Natural history of China
Кон на Пржевалски | Kůň Převalského | Przewalski-hest | Przewalski-Pferd | Prževalski hobune | Caballos de Przewalski | Przevalski-ĉevalo | Cheval de Przewalski | Equus przewalskii | סוס פז'בלסקי | Prževalskio arklys | Przewalskipaard | Koń Przewalskiego | Cavalo de Przewalski | Лошадь Пржевальского | Przewalskinhevonen | Przevalskijs häst | 野马
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