Breeds
Der Andalusische Riesenesel

Der Andalusische Riesenesel ist der heimliche Stolz der Spanier. Vermutlich haben die Mauren den Stammvater aus Afrika nach Spanien gebracht. Seine Verwandtschaft mit dem Ägyptischen Riesenesel liegt nahe. Ist aber wissenschaftlich nicht bewiesen. Es liegt nahe das über die Seidenstrasse Asiatische Esel nach Afrika gekommen sind.
Oft wird fälschlicher weise geschrieben das alle Hauseselrassen vom Afrikanischen Wildesel abstammen.
So kann ein Andalusier Hengst durchaus auch mal Wiehern , dies macht er aber höchst selten. Diese Rasse ist auch insgesammt ruhiger im Verhalten was das Schreien anbetrifft. Sie sind von noblem Charakter . Sie beherrschen alle Gangarten . Ihre Springfreude ist enorm. Sie haben kein Fluchtverhalten wie Pferde sind eher wehrhaft. Der Hengst wird nicht in der Stutherde toleriert. Die Stuten halten den Hengst auf einen Mindestabstand von 300 m .Die Tragzeit beträgt durchschnittlich 13 Monate. Die Stuten werden alle 23 Tage rossig und erreichen ein Stockmass von über 1,40 m Hengste sogar über 1,50 m.
Andalusier sind erst mit sieben Jahren ausgewachsen ,sie ereichen ein durchschnittliches Alter von 50 Jahren. Sie werden oft Schiefergrau oder braun geboren und brauchen fast 7 Jahre bis sie das typische Apfelschimmel Kleid tragen.
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Rasse: Allgemeiner
Name: Clasificasion: Ursprungsgebiet: Gefährdete Rasse
Jahr
der Erhebung: Bestand
insgesamt: Züchter 14 Stuten: 40 Zuchtesel: 11
Hengste reinrassig 8% |
Morfologie : Gewicht Stuten: 370 KG Stockmaß Hengste:148 im
mittel Farbe : Abstammung: geneticamente
por onapro asiatico
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Bestand: Aus
zuverlässlichen Angaben. Tendenz: |
Rassebeschreibung und Foto von: Eselgestüt les Murtes
Baudet du Poitou

Information:
The
Baudet de Poitou (also known as the Poitou Ass, the Poitou Donkey, the Poitevin
Donkey, and the Mammoth Donkey is a breed of donkey originating in the Poitou region
of France. One of the most distinctive donkey breeds, it is also among the
rarest and least-known. The "friendly, affectionate and docile"
Poitou Donkey is "the oldest breed approved in
A Zebrass is the offspring of a zebra and an ass.
Martina Franka Esel

Martina Franca Hengst im Staatsgestüt von Foggia/Italien Foto: Barbara Bank
Martina-Franca-Esel
Stockmaß: bei Hengsten bis 155 cm
Gewicht: bis 380 kg
Farbe: schwarz mit weißen Abzeichen an den Augenrändern, der Schnauze und dem Unterbauch, ähnelt dem katalanischen Groß-Esel, ist jedoch im Gesamteindruck feingliedriger.
Süditalienische Eselrasse, auch als Puli-Esel bekannt. Hauptzuchtgebiet ist Apulien mit den Provinzen Taranto, Bari und Brindisi.
Über Jahrhunderte wichtigstes landwirtschaftliches Nutztier, durch die Motorisierung, insbesondere nach dem zweiten Weltkrieg, verdrängt. Keine genaue Bestandszahlen, jedoch deutlicher Rückgang der Rasse in den letzten zehn Jahren. Leider landen unzählige dieser Esel in den Schlachthäusern Süditaliens. Seit kurzem Erhaltungsbemühungen durch eine neugegründete Gesellschaft.
http://www.esel.org/
Kiang (India, Nepal)
‘Somali’ wild ass ( Africa)
‘Onager’ in Mongolia, Turkestan, Iran and Syria.
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HYBRID EQUINES |
Equid (horse, donkey, zebra) hybrids are well known and some are bred commercially. The generic term for a zebra hybrid with a horse, pony, donkey or ass is a zebroid. The generic term for a hybrid of a zebra with any type of donkey or ass is a zebrass.
The usual naming convention for hybrids is a "portmanteau word" comprising first part of male parent's name + second part of female parent's name
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Father |
Mother |
Offspring |
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Donkey (jack) |
Horse (mare) |
Mule (male), John (male), Molly (female) |
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Horse |
Donkey (jenny/jennet) |
Hinny |
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Zebra |
Donkey (jenny/jennet) |
Zebrass, Zedonk,
Zebronkey, Zonkey, Zebadonk, Zebryde, Zenkey ( |
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Zebra |
Horse |
Zorse, Golden zebra, Zebra mule, Zebrule |
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Zebra |
Pony |
Zony |
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Zebra |
Shetland Pony |
Zetland |
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Donkey (jack) |
Zebra |
Zebret |
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Horse |
Zebra |
Hebra |
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A horse/zebra hybrid
foal at the |
Zebras that are hand-reared or reared with domestic horses or donkeys can become tame enough to be led, ridden or used as draught animals. Those raised with horses or donkeys may prefer to mate with horses or donkeys rather than with zebras.
MULES, MOLLIES AND HINNIES
Mules (donkey
stallion/horse mare) are bred as draught animals. Male mules are sterile, but
fertile female mules (mollies) sometimes occur and can be mated to either a
horse of donkey stallion. In
The hinny (horse stallion/donkey mare hybrid) is less common. The head of a hinny is more horse-like than the head of a mule. They are harder to produce than mules as stallion/jenny matings are less likely to result in pregnancy. Hinnies are smaller and finer boned than mules. This was believed to be due to the donkey mare having a less roomy womb, but the difficulty in impregnation suggests it is largely genetic. Donkeys have 62 chromosomes while horses have 64 chromosomes; hybrids are less likely where the male has more chromosomes than the female.
According to the
“Illustrated Natural History” by the Rev JG Wood (1853, 1874): The
cross-breed between the horse and the ass, which is commonly known by name of
the Mule, is a very valuable animal for certain purposes, possessing the
strength and power of the horse, with the hardiness and sure foot of the ass.
The largest most useful Mules are those which are produced by a male ass and a
mare, the large Spanish Ass being the best for this purpose. In
In "The Variation Of
Animals And Plants Under Domestication" Darwin wrote: "The ass has
a prepotent power over the horse, so that both the mule and the hinny more
resemble the ass than the horse; but that the prepotency runs more strongly in
the male-ass than in the female, so that the mule, which is the offspring of
the male-ass and mare, is more like an ass, than is the hinny, which is the
offspring of the female-ass and stallion." In "The Variation Of
Animals And Plants Under Domestication"
FERTILE MULES AND HULES
Mules are generally
sterile, but several female mules have produced offspring when mated to a
purebred horse or ass. This is so rare that the Romans had a saying, "cum
mula peperit," meaning "when a mule foals" - the equivalent of
"when hell freezes over." When a mule gave birth in
Donkeys have 62 chromosomes while horses have 64 chromosomes. As well as different numbers, the chromosomes have different structures. Mules and hinnies have 63 chromosomes that are a mixture of one from each parent. The different structure and number usually prevents the chromosomes from pairing up properly and creating successful embryos. Since 1527 there have been more than 60 foals born to female mules around the world and probably additional unreported ones. However, mollies have a strong maternal drive and will kidnap foals of horses and donkeys sharing the same paddock.
From The Royal Natural History, edited by Richard Lydekker and published 1894: There appear to be no authenticated instances of mules breeding among themselves; although the female mule will occasionally produce offspring with the male horse or ass. And it is somewhat remarkable that it does not appear that the hybrids between any other members of the Equine family are mutually fertile.
However, Cornevin and
Lesbre stated that in 1873 an Arab mule was fertilized in
In the 1920s, a mule mare
called "Old Beck" (Texas A&M) produced a mule daughter called
"Kit". When Old Beck was bred to a horse stallion she produced a
horse son (he sired horse foals). When bred to a donkey, she produced mule
offspring. Likewise, a mare mule in
A molly gave birth to 2
foals in
In April 2007, a 7 year
old black molly, “Kate”, owned by ranchers Larry and Laura Amos gave birth at a
Grand Mesa ranch near to Colbran. Kate was one of 10 mules purchased from
A fertile hinny in
There is an unverified case of a mare mule that produced a mule daughter (this may be another report of Old Beck and Kit). The daughter was also fertile and produced a horse-like foal with some mule traits; this was dubbed a "hule". There are no reports as to whether the hule was fertile; it may have been castrated in the same way as a mule stallion.
Asses have 64 chromosomes, horses have 62 so the hybrids have 63. When there's an odd number of chromosomes, meiosis (cell division to form gametes (egg or sperm cells)) doesn't work correctly. This causes hybrid sterility. Nature has a way round this called meiotic drive. Genes from each parent become tightly linked instead of independently assorted. The genes from one parent - usually the mother - will be over-represented in the gametes produced by the hybrid offspring.
Normally when cells divide to form gametes, a random mix of maternal/paternal alleles ends up in each gamete. With meiotic drive, there is distinct segregation of maternal and paternal alleles: all the horse genes end up on one side of the cell and all the donkey genes end up on the other. The cell then splits unevenly. Only one of those daughter cells will get the necessary machinery for life (genes from the mother, mitochondria, cytoplasm etc) while the other cell is discarded along with all the genes from the father! In fertile mule mares, the mare passes on a complete set of her maternal genes (i.e. from her horse/pony mother) to the foal. A female mule bred to a horse will therefore produce a 100% horse foal (which is fertile) while a female mule bred to an ass will produce another mule.
It seems to be nature's way of letting a female mate with a related species, but preserving the genes from the female side of the family so the hybrid descendent can produce a purebred offspring.
ZEBRA/DONKEY (ZEBRA/ASS) HYBRIDS
Zedonks (zebronkeys,
zonkeys, zebadonks, zebrydes) are zebra stallion/donkey hybrids. Zebrets are
donkey stallion/zebra mare hybrids and are rare. Other names have been used:
zenkey (
Zebrasses resemble donkeys with a striped pattern overlaided on the donkey's background colour. Usually there is clear striping on the legs, a dorsal stripe. There may be facial stripes and indistinct stripes on the body. According to Dorcas McClintock in "A Natural History Of Zebras," a hybrid foal from a Somali wild ass bred to a mountain zebra mare had 2 transverse shoulder stripes, leg bands and zebra-like ear stripes. Piebald zebrasses are produced when a zebra is crossed to a piebald donkey.
Zebrass males are
generally sterile although
Zebra/ass hybrids have
been recorded since at least the 1850s. According to the “Illustrated Natural
History” by the Rev JG Wood (1853, 1874): Between the zebras and the
domestic ass several curious Mules have been produced, and may be seen in the
collection of the
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A Grevy’s zebra stallion
was presented to
A New Member Of The Animal Kingdom. A strange beast came into being a short time ago, and naturally it was the Sells-Floto Circus which seized upon it as thing of interest to the public at large That beast was the ‘Hyney,’ a Government animal, now being exhibited with the Circus to show the wonderful results of the propagation and breeding of entirely different animals.
For the parents of the Hyney were brought from widely separated parts of the earth. After years of experiments, in which attempts were made to cross the zebra with some other beast that might give it value as a domestic animal, the United States Government, through its division of husbandry and animal industry, decided that the burro was the proper animal. And so a Grevy Zebra, of the Galla district of Africa, the fiercest and wildest of all types of zebra, was crossed with a Rocky Mountain Burro, known as the slowest and dullest and most sluggard animal of the horse species. The result was a success.
And thus it is that a new animal enters into being – the Hyney – with a burro for a mother and a zebra for a father. The combination is perfect. As fleet, as graceful as a horse, yet the Hyney has all the strength and working power of a mule. As intelligent as its zebra forebear, still it has the docility of its burro ancestors. Five of the animals are exhibited both in the menagerie and main performance of the Sells-Floto Circus, where the extent of their intelligence and their value as farm animals is well depicted.
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Two zebroids drawing a cart in 1915 |
An article from New York
Times, June 16th, 1973, announced the birth of a zebra/donkey hybrid at the
Jerusalem Zoo. They called it a "hamzab" from the Hebrew for
donkey-zebra and erroneously claimed it to be the first of its kind born anywhere.
A breeding programme at Colchester Zoo,
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Usually a zebra stallion
is paired with a horse mare or ass mare, but in 2005, a Burchell's zebra named
Allison produced a zebrass (a zebret ) called Alex sired by a donkey at
Highland plantation in
In "Origin of
Species" (1859) Charles Darwin mentioned four coloured drawings of hybrids
between the ass and zebra. In his "The Variation Of Animals And Plants
Under Domestication", he mentions an unusal zebra triple-hybrid: "I
have seen, in the
In "Darwinism An Exposition Of The Theory Of Natural Selection With Some Of Its Applications" (1889), Alfred Russel Wallace commented on the production and appearance of hybrids: "Crosses between the two species of zebra, or even between the zebra and the quagga, or the quagga and the ass, might have led to a very different result."
ZEBRA/HORSE, ZEBRA/PONY HYBRIDS
Zorses or zebrules are zebra stallion/horse hybrids and zonies are zebra stallion/pony hybrids. Zorses are sometimes called golden zebras due to dark stripes overlaying a chestnut background, though the colour depends on the colour of the horse parent. The zetland is a one off accidental zebra/Shetland pony hybrid.
Zebroid is a blanket term for zebra/horse hybrids. Any of the zebra species can be used in breeding zebroids; the colour depends on the colour of the horse; usually there is clear striping on the legs, a dorsal stripe, striped face and less distinct stripes on the body; the somewhat donkey-like attributes of zebras result in a dorsal stripe, upright mane without a forelock and large ears.
Piebald zorses are
produced when a zebra is crossed to a piebald horse. Stripes are visible on the
colored areas of the coat. The white patches form a startling contrast with
these striped patches. A hybrid called "Eclyse" was bred in
Another term for zebra hybrids is zebra mule since zebra stallions (which are hand-raised or fostered on a horse mare) are used in preference to zebra mares. Zebra hinnies are rarely found. Zebroid and zebrass males are generally sterile. Although wild animals, zebras which are hand-reared or reared with domestic horses can become tame enough to be led, ridden or used as draught animals.
In "Origin of Species" (1859) Charles Darwin wrote: "In Lord Moreton's famous hybrid from a chestnut mare and male quagga, the hybrid, and even the pure offspring subsequently produced from the mare by a black Arabian sire, were much more plainly barred across the legs than is even the pure quagga..
In his "The
Variation Of Animals And Plants Under Domestication",
In "Darwinism An Exposition Of The Theory Of Natural Selection With Some Of Its Applications" (1889), Alfred Russel Wallace commented: "Crosses between the two species of zebra, or even between the zebra and the quagga, or the quagga and the ass, might have led to a very different result."
Raymond Hook of
Carl Hagenbeck produced
zebrules (zebra/pony hybrids) at his Tierpark in
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Cossar Ewart, Professor
of Natural History at
In "Anomalies and
Curiosities of Medicine" by George M Gould and Walter L Pyle (1896) wrote:
The influence of the paternal seed on the physical and mental constitution
of the child is well known. To designate this condition, Telegony is the Word
that was coined by Weismann in his "Das Keimplasma," and he defines
it as "Infection of the Germ," and, at another time, as " Those
doubtful instances in which the offspring is said to resemble, not the father,
but an early mate of the mother," - or, in other words, the alleged
influence of a previous sire on the progeny produced by a subsequent one from
the same mother. In a systematic discussion of telegony before the Royal
Medical Society,
In the year 1815 Lord Morton put a male quagga [a type of zebra] to a young chestnut mare of seven eighths Arabian blood, which had never before been bred from. The result was a female hybrid which resembled both parents. He now sold the mare to Sir Gore Ousley, who two years after she bore the hybrid put her to a black Arabian horse. During the two following years she had two foals which Lord Morton thus describes: " They have the character of the Arabian breed as decidedly as can be expected when fifteen sixteenths of the blood are Arabian, and they are fine specimens of the breed; but both in their color and in the hair of their manes they have a striking resemblance to the quagga. Their color is bay, marked more or less like the quagga in a darker tint. Both are distinguished by the dark line along the ridge of the back, the dark stripes across the forehand and the dark bars across the back part of the legs." The President of the Royal Society saw the foals and verified Lord Morton's statement.
However, Cossar Ewart found that zebra-horse hybrids were brown with faint stripes. When the same mares were subsequently mated with a pony, the resulting foals showed none of the markings or temperamental characteristics of a zebra. Cossar Ewart found that in male zebra-hybrids the sexual cells were immature and the sperm were abnormal, however the ovaries of female zebra-hybrids appeared similar to those of a normal mare or female zebra. As well as disproving paternal impression, he wanted to produce a more resilient draught animal for South Africa; one less subject to local diseases and more tractable than a mule.
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In "The Science of Life" (c 1929) by H G Wells, J Huxley and GP Wells, the authors wrote "To-day it is possible to assert without any question that telegony is a mere fable, which could only have gained ground in the days when men were ignorant of the true mechanism of fertilization and reproduction. The supposed instances of telegony which are constantly being reported even to-day, invariably. Perhaps the most famous example is that of Lord Morton's mare. The mare, a pure Arabian, was mated with a zebra stallion, and produced a hybrid foal. On two later occasions, she was bred to a black Arab stallion, and gave birth to two further foals. These had legs which were striped even more definitely than those of the hybrid foal or the zebra sire himself, and one had some stripes on parts of the neck also. In addition, they had a stiff mane of very zebra-like appearance. Darwin himself accepted the evidence as sufficient proof of telegony. But when definitely planned and long-continued experiments were made, the proof escaped. Cossar Ewart, for instance, made a number of horse and zebra crosses to test the validity of the belief. When mares previously bred to zebras were afterwards mated with horse stallions, their colts were often without the least trace of zebra characters. In other cases, colts with some degree of striping were produced. But one mare gave birth to a striped colt as a result of her first mating, which was with a horse stallion ; while two later matings with other stallions, made after she had been successfully mated once and three times respectively with a zebra, gave unstriped offspring. In other cases, when striped colts were born to a mare and stallion after the mare had been previously mated to a zebra, Ewart took other mares, closely related to the first, bred them to the same Arabian stallion without having mated them previously with a zebra - and they, too, produced striped foals. In short, the production of striping (and also of erect mane) in foals is not a very uncommon occurrence in horses; it may appear whether previous impregnation by a zebra has taken place or not. The stripes of Lord Morton's foals were a mere coincidence, well illustrating the danger of drawing conclusions from single and therefore possibly exceptional cases, and the need for systematic and repeated experiments."

Above: The King's Hybrid (1902). This seems to be the same animal that Hammerton later described in 1930.
In "Animal Life and
the World of Nature" (1902-1903), WP Dando (Fellow of the Zoological
Society, London) writes: Much interest has been aroused at the Zoo by the
presentation by His Majesty the King of a hybrid Zebra, a cross-breed between a
stallion horse and a Burchell's zebra mare. This animal was sent over to
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In "Wonders of Animal Life" (1930), J A Hammerton, it noted that crosses were made between Chapman's zebras and a ponies during the South African War . |
In "Wonders of
Animal Life" (1930) edited by J A Hammerton, it notes: During the South
African War, an attempt was made by the Boers to evolve a new animal to
supplement the supply available for transport work. A cross was obtained
between a Chapman's zebra and a pony and a specimen was captured by the British
and presented to King Edward VII by Lord Kitchener. The animal was produced
chiefly for hauling guns. It was photographed by W
McClintock noted that a
Chapman's zebra stallion, kept by Friedrich von Falz-Fein at Askania-Nova in
southern
In “Out of Africa”, the
African memoirs of Baroness Karen Blixen (1885-1962) published in 1937, Blixen
writes: ” It is a much debated question whether it is possible to cross
domestic animals with the game: many people have tried to create a type of
small horse fitted to the country, by breeding from zebra and horses, though I
myself have never seen such cross-breeds.”
Today, zorses and zonies
are relatively common. Zebra hybrids are considered better suited (through
better temperament and more horse-like/donkey-like conformation) than pure
zebras to being ridden or used for draught. They are resistant to some of the
diseases that afflict horses and donkeys, hence they have been used use in
ZORSE/ZONY COLOURS
Zebras are normally bred
to solid colour horses/ponies to produce offspring with striping over the whole
body. The interaction of chestnut and zebra striping gives rise to the
alternative name "golden zebra". The striping pattern depends on the
type of zebra used. When bred to a piebald (black-and-white) horse (US: piebald
pinto) or to a skewbald (brown/bay/chestnut-and-white) horse (US: skewbald
pinto) or to particoloured USAnian breeds known as "Paint" and
"Appaloosa", the offspring have a mix of striped coloured areas and
unstriped white areas. Grey horses are not used as the offspring will be grey,
becoming white with age, albeit having the conformation of a zorse/zony.
In "Origin of
Species" (1859) Charles Darwin mentioned four coloured drawings of hybrids
between the ass and zebra. He noted "In Lord Moreton's famous hybrid from
a chestnut mare and male quagga, the hybrid, and even the pure offspring
subsequently produced from the mare by a black Arabian sire, were much more
plainly barred across the legs than is even the pure quagga. Lastly, and this
is another most remarkable case, a hybrid has been figured by Dr. Gray (and he
informs me that he knows of a second case) from the ass and the hemionus."
Darwin described the latter hybrid in "The Variation Of Animals And Plants
Under Domestication": The Equus indicus [onager] a hybrid, raised at
Knowsley ('Gleanings from the Knowsley Menageries' by Dr. J.E. Gray.) from a
female of this species by a male domestic ass, had all four legs transversely
and conspicuously striped, had three short stripes on each shoulder and had
even some zebra-like stripes on its face! Dr. Gray informs me that he has seen
a second hybrid of the same parentage, similarly striped.
In his "The
Variation Of Animals And Plants Under Domestication",
In that book, Darwin
concluded: "The ass has a prepotent power over the horse, so that both
the mule and the hinny more resemble the ass than the horse; but that the
prepotency runs more strongly in the male-ass than in the female, so that the
mule, which is the offspring of the male-ass and mare, is more like an ass,
than is the hinny, which is the offspring of the female-ass and stallion."
In "The Variation Of Animals And Plants Under Domestication"
In "Darwinism An
Exposition Of The Theory Of Natural Selection With Some Of Its
Applications" (1889), Alfred Russel Wallace commented: "Crosses
between the two species of zebra, or even between the zebra and the quagga, or
the quagga and the ass, might have led to a very different result."
OTHER EQUID HYBRIDS
According to Dorcas McClintock in "A Natural History Of Zebras," Grevy's zebra has 46 chromosomes; plains zebras have 44 and mountain zebras have 32. The domestic horse has 64 chromosomes. Although all 3 zebra species have been crossed with domestic horses, the 2 dissimilar sets of chromosomes inherited by a zebra hybrid cannot mix because of differences in number, size and shape. As a result, almost all zebra hybrids are sterile. In captivity, plains zebras have been crossed with mountain zebras. The hybrid foals had no dewlap and, except for their larger ears and their hindquarters pattern, they resembled the plains zebra parent. Attempts to breed a Grevy's zebra stallion to mountain zebra mares resulted in a high rate of abortion. In the wild, zebra species don't interbreed even where their ranges overlap or they graze together. This was was also true when the quagga and Burchell's race of plains zebra shared the same area. A hybrid


















