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Zebroid

A zebroid is the offspring of any cross between a zebra and any other equine to create a hybrid. In most cases, the sire is a zebra stallion. The offspring of a donkey sire and zebra dam, called a donkra, and the offspring of a horse sire and a zebra dam, called a hebra, do exist, but are rare and are usually sterile. Zebroids have been bred since the 19th century. Charles Darwin noted several zebra hybrids in his works.

Zebroid
A zorse in an 1899 photograph, "Romulus: one year old", from J. C. Ewart's The Penycuik Experiments
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Perissodactyla
Family: Equidae
Tribe: Equini
Genus: Equus
Species:

Types edit

Zebroid is the term generally used for all zebra hybrids. The different hybrids are generally named using a portmanteau of the sire's name and the dam's name. Generally, no distinction is made as to which zebra species is used. Many times, when zebras are crossbred, they develop some form of dwarfism. Breeding of different branches of the equine family, which does not occur in the wild, generally results in sterile offspring. The combination of sire and dam also affects the offspring phenotype.

A zorse is the offspring of a zebra stallion and a horse mare. This cross is also called a zebrose, zebrula, zebrule, or zebra mule. The rarer reverse pairing is sometimes called a hebra, horsebra, zebrinny, or zebra hinny. Like most other animal hybrids, the zorse is sterile.[1]

A zony is the offspring of a zebra stallion and a pony mare. Medium-sized pony mares are preferred to produce riding zonies, but zebras have been crossed with smaller pony breeds such as the Shetland, resulting in so-called "Zetlands".[2]

A cross between a zebra and a donkey is known as a zenkey,[3] zonkey[4] (a term also used for donkeys in Tijuana, Mexico, painted as zebras for tourists to pose with them in souvenir photos),[5] zebrass, or zedonk.[6] Donkeys are closely related to zebras and both animals belong to the horse family. These zebra–donkey hybrids are very rare.[7][8] In South Africa, they occur where zebras and donkeys are found in proximity to each other.[citation needed] Like mules and hinnies, however, they are generally genetically unable to breed, due to an odd number of chromosomes disrupting meiosis.

Genetics edit

Living equids show wide variation in the number of chromosomes, ranging from a diploid number of 32 chromosomes in the mountain zebra to 66 in Przewalski's horse. This is due to several chromosomal fusion and fission events during the evolution of equids.[9] The zebra has between 32 and 46 chromosomes depending on the species.

In spite of this difference, viable hybrids are possible, provided the gene combination in the hybrid allows for embryonic development to birth. A hybrid will have a number of chromosomes exactly halfway between that of its parents; for example, a cross between a horse (64 chromosomes), and a plains zebra (44 chromosomes), will produce a zebroid offspring with 54 chromosomes. The chromosome difference makes female hybrids poorly fertile and male hybrids generally sterile, due to a phenomenon called Haldane's rule. The evolutionary biologist J. B. S. Haldane first recorded in 1922 that genetic hybrids are often inviable or sterile. Since none of the males are fertile, the females must be paired with either a donkey or a zebra. The difference in chromosome number is most likely due to horses having two longer chromosomes that contain similar gene content to four zebra chromosomes.[10]

Extant Equus species: chromosome number edit

Subgenus Scientific name Common name Chromosome number (2n)
Hippotigris

(zebras)

Equus zebra Mountain zebra 32
Equus grevyi Grévy's zebra 46
Equus quagga Plains zebra 44
Asinus

(asses)

Equus africanus African wild ass; includes domestic donkey 62
Equus hemionus Onager, hemione, or Asiatic wild ass 56
Equus kiang Kiang 52[11]
Equus

(horses)

Equus ferus caballus Domestic horse 64
Equus ferus przewalskii Przewalski's horse 66[12]

Zebras are more closely related to wild asses (a group which includes donkeys) than to horses. The horse lineage diverged from other equids an estimated 4.0 - 4.7 million years ago;[13] zebras and asses diverged an estimated 1.69–1.99 million years ago.[11] The cladogram of Equus below is simplified from Vistrup et al. (2013).[13]

Equus
Zebras

Mountain zebra (E. zebra)

Plains zebra (E. quagga)

Grévy's zebra (E. grevyi)

Wild asses

Kiang (E. kiang)

Onager (E. hemionus)

African wild ass (E. africanus)

Horses

Domestic horse (E. ferus caballus)

Przewalski's horse (E. ferus przewalski)

Physical characteristics edit

 
A zorse

Zebroids physically resemble their nonzebra parent, but are striped like a zebra. The stripes generally do not cover the whole body and might be confined to the legs, or spread onto parts of the body or neck. If the non-zebra parent was patterned (such as a roan, Appaloosa, pinto/paint, piebald, or skewbald), this pattern might be passed down to the zebroid, in which case the stripes are usually confined to non-white areas. The alternative name "golden zebra" relates to the interaction of zebra striping and a horse's bay or chestnut colour to give a zebra-like black-on-bay or black-on-chestnut pattern that superficially resembles the extinct quagga. Zebra–donkey hybrids usually have a dorsal (back) stripe and a ventral (belly) stripe.

 
The hebra Eclyse

Zorses combine the zebra striping overlaid on coloured areas of the hybrid's coat. Zorses are most often bred using solid-colored horses. If the horse parent is piebald (black and white) or skewbald (color other than black and white), the zorse may inherit the dominant depigmentation genes for white patches. The tobiano (the most common white modifier found in the horse) directly interacts with the zorse coat to give it white markings. Only the non-depigmented areas will have zebra striping, resulting in a zorse with white patches and striped patches. This effect is seen in the zebroid named Eclyse (a hebra rather than a zorse) born in Stukenbrock, Germany, in 2007 to a zebra mare called Eclipse and a horse stallion called Ulysses.

Zonkeys tend to be either tan, brown or grey in colour from their donkey parent with a lighter underside, and it is on the lighter parts of their body like their legs and belly with stripes on some parts from their zebra parent.

Zebroids are preferred over zebras for practical uses, such as riding, because the zebra has a different body shape from a horse or a donkey and, consequently, it is difficult to find tack to fit a zebra. However, a zebroid is usually more inclined to be temperamental than a purebred horse and can be difficult to handle. Zebras, being wild animals and not domesticated like horses and donkeys, can pass on their wild traits to their offspring.[citation needed] Zebras, while not usually very large, are extremely strong and aggressive. Similarly, zorses have a strong temperament and can be aggressive.

Historical and notable zebroids edit

 
Zebra–horse hybrid foal with quagga-like markings, Walter Rothschild Zoological Museum, Tring, England

In 1815, Lord Morton mated a quagga stallion to a chestnut Arabian mare. The result was a female hybrid which resembled both parents. This provoked the interest of Cossar Ewart, Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh (1882–1927) and a keen geneticist. Ewart crossed a zebra stallion with pony mares to investigate the theory of telegony, or paternal impression. In The Origin of Species (1859), Charles Darwin mentioned four coloured drawings of hybrids between the ass and zebra. He also wrote

In Lord Morton'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.[14]

In his book The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication, Darwin described a hybrid ass–zebra specimen in the British Museum as being dappled on its flanks. He also mentioned a "triple hybrid, from a bay mare, by a hybrid from a male ass and female zebra" displayed at London Zoo. This would have required the zebroid sire to be fertile.

During the South African War, the Boers crossed Chapman's zebras with ponies to produce animals for transport work, chiefly for hauling guns. A specimen was captured by British forces, presented to King Edward VII by Lord Kitchener and photographed by W. S. Berridge.[15] Zebras are resistant to sleeping sickness, whereas purebred horses and ponies are not, and zebra mules hopefully would inherit this resistance.

Grévy's zebra has been crossed with the Somali wild ass in the early 20th century. Zorses were bred by the U.S. government and reported in Genetics in Relation to Agriculture by E. B. Babcock and R. E. Clausen (early 20th century), in an attempt to investigate inheritance and telegony. The experiments were also reported in The Science of Life by H. G. Wells, J. Huxley and G. P. Wells (around 1929).

Interest in zebra crosses continued in the 1970s. In 1973, a cross between a zebra and a donkey was foaled at the Jerusalem Zoo. They called it a "hamzab". In the 1970s, the Colchester Zoo in England bred zedonks, at first by accident and later to create a disease-resistant riding and draft animal. The experiment was discontinued when zoos became more conservation-minded. A number of hybrids were kept at the zoo after this; the last one died in 2009.[16] As of 2010, one adult still remained at the tourist attraction of Groombridge Place[17] near Tunbridge Wells in Kent.

21st century edit

Today, various zebroids are bred as riding and draft animals and as curiosities in circuses and smaller zoos. A zorse (more accurately a zony) was born at Eden Ostrich World, Cumbria, England, in 2001, after a zebra was left in a field with a Shetland pony. It was referred to as a Zetland. Usually, a zebra stallion is paired with a horse mare or donkey jenny, but in 2005, a Burchell's zebra mare named Allison produced a zonkey called Alex, sired by a donkey jack at Highland Plantation in the parish of Saint Thomas, Barbados. Alex, born 21 April 2005, is apparently the first zonkey in Barbados.[18] In 2007, a horse stallion, Ulysses, and a zebra mare, Eclipse, produced a hebra named Eclyse, displaying an unusually patchy color coating.[19][20] In July 2010, a zonkey was born at the Chestatee Wildlife Preserve in Dahlonega, Georgia.[21] Another zebra–donkey hybrid, like the Barbados zonkey sired by a donkey, was born 3 July 2011 in Haicang Safari Park, Haicang, Xiamen, China.[22] A zonkey, Ippo, was born 21 July 2013 in an animal reserve in Florence, Italy.[23] Khumba, the offspring of a zebra mare and a dwarf albino donkey jack, was born on 21 April 2014 in the zoo of Reynosa in the state of Tamaulipas, Mexico.[24][25] More recently, in November 2018 at a farm in Somerset, a cross between a donkey jack and a zebra mare was born.[26] The male foal was described as a zonkey by its owner and has been named Zippy.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Breeding References. EquinePost. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011.
  2. ^ Carter, Helen (27 June 2001). "Crisis-hit farm welcomes its gift forse". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 20 April 2010. it could be a zorse perhaps, a fony, or maybe a shebra or a zetland. Whatever its name, the arrival of the strange beast has been hailed as a godsend
  3. ^ "Zenkey foal a hybrid star". The Sydney Morning Herald. Agence France-Presse. 29 August 2003.
  4. ^ Steiner, Lee Rabinowitz (1954). Make the Most of Yourself: A Psychological Guide for Normal People. Prentice-Hall. p. 251.
  5. ^ Miranda, Carolina A. "How the zonkey got its stripes: Long before Instagram, Tijuana's tourist donkeys were camera-ready". Los Angeles Times.
  6. ^ McCarthy, Colman (1984). Involvements: One Journalist's Place in the World. Acropolis Books. p. 202. ISBN 9780874917574.
  7. ^ Megersa, B; Biffa, D; Kumsa, B (13 February 2007). "A mysterious zebra-donkey hybrid (zedonk or zonkey) produced under natural mating: A case report from Borana, southern Ethiopia". Animal Production Research Advances. 2 (3). doi:10.4314/apra.v2i3.36328.
  8. ^ Benirschke, K; Low, RJ; Brownhill, LE; Caday, LB; Devenecia-Fernandez, J (1 April 1964). "Chromosome Studies of a Donkey-Grevy Zebra Hybrid". Chromosoma. 15: 1–13. doi:10.1007/BF00326911. PMID 14171168. S2CID 41732666.
  9. ^ Musilova, P.; Kubickova, S.; Vahala, J.; Rubes, J. (27 March 2013). "Subchromosomal karyotype evolution in Equidae". Chromosome Research. 21 (2): 175–187. doi:10.1007/s10577-013-9346-z. ISSN 0967-3849. PMID 23532666. S2CID 16946384.
  10. ^ K. Benirschke; et al. (1964). "Chromosome Studies of a Donkey-Grevy Zebra Hybrid". Chromosoma. 15 (1): 1–13. doi:10.1007/BF00326911. PMID 14171168. S2CID 41732666.
  11. ^ a b Jónsson, Hákon; Schubert, Mikkel; Seguin-Orlando, Andaine; Ginolhac, Aurélien; Petersen, Lillian; Fumagalli, Matteo; Albrechtsen, Anders; Petersen, Bent; Korneliussen, Thorfinn S.; Vilstrup, Julia T.; Lear, Teri (30 December 2014). "Speciation with gene flow in equids despite extensive chromosomal plasticity". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 111 (52): 18655–18660. Bibcode:2014PNAS..11118655J. doi:10.1073/pnas.1412627111. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 4284605. PMID 25453089.
  12. ^ Lau, Allison N.; Peng, Lei; Goto, Hiroki; Chemnick, Leona; Ryder, Oliver A.; Makova, Kateryna D. (1 January 2009). "Horse Domestication and Conservation Genetics of Przewalski's Horse Inferred from Sex Chromosomal and Autosomal Sequences". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 26 (1): 199–208. doi:10.1093/molbev/msn239. ISSN 0737-4038. PMID 18931383.
  13. ^ a b Vilstrup, Julia T.; Seguin-Orlando, Andaine; Stiller, Mathias; Ginolhac, Aurelien; Raghavan, Maanasa; Nielsen, Sandra C. A.; Weinstock, Jacobo; Froese, Duane; Vasiliev, Sergei K.; Ovodov, Nikolai D.; Clary, Joel (20 February 2013). Lalueza-Fox, Carles (ed.). "Mitochondrial Phylogenomics of Modern and Ancient Equids". PLOS ONE. 8 (2): e55950. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...855950V. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0055950. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 3577844. PMID 23437078.
  14. ^ Darwin, Charles (2009). On the origin of species, 1859. New York: New York University Press. pp. 118–119. ISBN 978-0814720585.
  15. ^ Wonders of Animal Life, edited by J. A. Hammerton (1930)
  16. ^ "Colchester Zoo mourns the loss of Shadow the Zeedonk" (Press release). Colchester Zoo. 3 April 2009. from the original on 8 July 2011.
  17. ^ "The Enchanted Forest". Groombridge Place Gardens. from the original on 29 July 2010.
  18. ^ "Call it zonkey or a deebra? Zebra has a foal sired by a donkey". NBC News. Associated Press. 29 April 2005. Retrieved 13 October 2008.
  19. ^ Amanda Billner. "Zebran är en häst" 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine (in Swedish). Dagens Nyheter's webpage, 28 June 2007. Retrieved 30 June 2007.
  20. ^ BBC "Half horse, half zebra - hebra 4 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 3 July 2007]
  21. ^ "Zebra, donkey hybrid born in Dahlonega". Gainesville Times. 27 July 2010.
  22. ^ "Donkra: Cross between Donkey, Zebra born". 3 News. 5 July 2011.
  23. ^ "It's a zonkey! Zebra and donkey hybrid born in Italy". Daily News. New York. from the original on 27 July 2013.
  24. ^ . The Telegraph. 25 April 2014. Archived from the original on 26 April 2014. Retrieved 26 April 2014.
  25. ^ https://abc7.com/donkey-zebra-cross-breed-baby-zonkey/43631/
  26. ^ "Rare cross between donkey and zebra known as 'zonkey' born on Somerset farm". The Independent. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved 6 November 2018.

External links edit

  • Hybrid Equines Information and images of different zebroids
  • Eclyse - Photo of a zebroid named Eclyse
  • BBC News (26 June 2001): "Zebra Hybrid is Cute Surprise"
  • Metro (28 June 2007): "A single-zorsed story" 3 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • Dorsett, Katherine. "What the heck is a zedonk?" CNN. 23 September 2010.
  • The International Zebra Zorse Zonkey Association 2 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Video of a Zorse
  • Rare zebra-donkey mix born in Florence animal reserve: The zonkey named Ippo only one in Italy
  • [1] 27 minute video of a zedonk bred and raised in Trinidad
  • www.minizonkey.com; Stuart (FL) News (July 18, 2017); Stuart (FL) News (October 5, 2019)

zebroid, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2013, le. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Zebroid news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message A zebroid is the offspring of any cross between a zebra and any other equine to create a hybrid In most cases the sire is a zebra stallion The offspring of a donkey sire and zebra dam called a donkra and the offspring of a horse sire and a zebra dam called a hebra do exist but are rare and are usually sterile Zebroids have been bred since the 19th century Charles Darwin noted several zebra hybrids in his works Zebroid A zorse in an 1899 photograph Romulus one year old from J C Ewart s The Penycuik Experiments Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Perissodactyla Family Equidae Tribe Equini Genus Equus Species E zebra E equine Contents 1 Types 2 Genetics 2 1 Extant Equus species chromosome number 3 Physical characteristics 4 Historical and notable zebroids 4 1 21st century 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksTypes editZebroid is the term generally used for all zebra hybrids The different hybrids are generally named using a portmanteau of the sire s name and the dam s name Generally no distinction is made as to which zebra species is used Many times when zebras are crossbred they develop some form of dwarfism Breeding of different branches of the equine family which does not occur in the wild generally results in sterile offspring The combination of sire and dam also affects the offspring phenotype A zorse is the offspring of a zebra stallion and a horse mare This cross is also called a zebrose zebrula zebrule or zebra mule The rarer reverse pairing is sometimes called a hebra horsebra zebrinny or zebra hinny Like most other animal hybrids the zorse is sterile 1 A zony is the offspring of a zebra stallion and a pony mare Medium sized pony mares are preferred to produce riding zonies but zebras have been crossed with smaller pony breeds such as the Shetland resulting in so called Zetlands 2 A cross between a zebra and a donkey is known as a zenkey 3 zonkey 4 a term also used for donkeys in Tijuana Mexico painted as zebras for tourists to pose with them in souvenir photos 5 zebrass or zedonk 6 Donkeys are closely related to zebras and both animals belong to the horse family These zebra donkey hybrids are very rare 7 8 In South Africa they occur where zebras and donkeys are found in proximity to each other citation needed Like mules and hinnies however they are generally genetically unable to breed due to an odd number of chromosomes disrupting meiosis Genetics editLiving equids show wide variation in the number of chromosomes ranging from a diploid number of 32 chromosomes in the mountain zebra to 66 in Przewalski s horse This is due to several chromosomal fusion and fission events during the evolution of equids 9 The zebra has between 32 and 46 chromosomes depending on the species In spite of this difference viable hybrids are possible provided the gene combination in the hybrid allows for embryonic development to birth A hybrid will have a number of chromosomes exactly halfway between that of its parents for example a cross between a horse 64 chromosomes and a plains zebra 44 chromosomes will produce a zebroid offspring with 54 chromosomes The chromosome difference makes female hybrids poorly fertile and male hybrids generally sterile due to a phenomenon called Haldane s rule The evolutionary biologist J B S Haldane first recorded in 1922 that genetic hybrids are often inviable or sterile Since none of the males are fertile the females must be paired with either a donkey or a zebra The difference in chromosome number is most likely due to horses having two longer chromosomes that contain similar gene content to four zebra chromosomes 10 Extant Equus species chromosome number edit See also Equus genus Taxonomic and evolutionary history Subgenus Scientific name Common name Chromosome number 2n Hippotigris zebras Equus zebra Mountain zebra 32 Equus grevyi Grevy s zebra 46 Equus quagga Plains zebra 44 Asinus asses Equus africanus African wild ass includes domestic donkey 62 Equus hemionus Onager hemione or Asiatic wild ass 56 Equus kiang Kiang 52 11 Equus horses Equus ferus caballus Domestic horse 64 Equus ferus przewalskii Przewalski s horse 66 12 Zebras are more closely related to wild asses a group which includes donkeys than to horses The horse lineage diverged from other equids an estimated 4 0 4 7 million years ago 13 zebras and asses diverged an estimated 1 69 1 99 million years ago 11 The cladogram of Equus below is simplified from Vistrup et al 2013 13 Equus Zebras Mountain zebra E zebra Plains zebra E quagga Grevy s zebra E grevyi Wild asses Kiang E kiang Onager E hemionus African wild ass E africanus Horses Domestic horse E ferus caballus Przewalski s horse E ferus przewalski Physical characteristics edit nbsp A zorse Zebroids physically resemble their nonzebra parent but are striped like a zebra The stripes generally do not cover the whole body and might be confined to the legs or spread onto parts of the body or neck If the non zebra parent was patterned such as a roan Appaloosa pinto paint piebald or skewbald this pattern might be passed down to the zebroid in which case the stripes are usually confined to non white areas The alternative name golden zebra relates to the interaction of zebra striping and a horse s bay or chestnut colour to give a zebra like black on bay or black on chestnut pattern that superficially resembles the extinct quagga Zebra donkey hybrids usually have a dorsal back stripe and a ventral belly stripe nbsp The hebra Eclyse Zorses combine the zebra striping overlaid on coloured areas of the hybrid s coat Zorses are most often bred using solid colored horses If the horse parent is piebald black and white or skewbald color other than black and white the zorse may inherit the dominant depigmentation genes for white patches The tobiano the most common white modifier found in the horse directly interacts with the zorse coat to give it white markings Only the non depigmented areas will have zebra striping resulting in a zorse with white patches and striped patches This effect is seen in the zebroid named Eclyse a hebra rather than a zorse born in Stukenbrock Germany in 2007 to a zebra mare called Eclipse and a horse stallion called Ulysses Zonkeys tend to be either tan brown or grey in colour from their donkey parent with a lighter underside and it is on the lighter parts of their body like their legs and belly with stripes on some parts from their zebra parent Zebroids are preferred over zebras for practical uses such as riding because the zebra has a different body shape from a horse or a donkey and consequently it is difficult to find tack to fit a zebra However a zebroid is usually more inclined to be temperamental than a purebred horse and can be difficult to handle Zebras being wild animals and not domesticated like horses and donkeys can pass on their wild traits to their offspring citation needed Zebras while not usually very large are extremely strong and aggressive Similarly zorses have a strong temperament and can be aggressive Historical and notable zebroids edit nbsp Zebra horse hybrid foal with quagga like markings Walter Rothschild Zoological Museum Tring England In 1815 Lord Morton mated a quagga stallion to a chestnut Arabian mare The result was a female hybrid which resembled both parents This provoked the interest of Cossar Ewart Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh 1882 1927 and a keen geneticist Ewart crossed a zebra stallion with pony mares to investigate the theory of telegony or paternal impression In The Origin of Species 1859 Charles Darwin mentioned four coloured drawings of hybrids between the ass and zebra He also wrote In Lord Morton 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 14 In his book The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication Darwin described a hybrid ass zebra specimen in the British Museum as being dappled on its flanks He also mentioned a triple hybrid from a bay mare by a hybrid from a male ass and female zebra displayed at London Zoo This would have required the zebroid sire to be fertile During the South African War the Boers crossed Chapman s zebras with ponies to produce animals for transport work chiefly for hauling guns A specimen was captured by British forces presented to King Edward VII by Lord Kitchener and photographed by W S Berridge 15 Zebras are resistant to sleeping sickness whereas purebred horses and ponies are not and zebra mules hopefully would inherit this resistance Grevy s zebra has been crossed with the Somali wild ass in the early 20th century Zorses were bred by the U S government and reported in Genetics in Relation to Agriculture by E B Babcock and R E Clausen early 20th century in an attempt to investigate inheritance and telegony The experiments were also reported in The Science of Life by H G Wells J Huxley and G P Wells around 1929 Interest in zebra crosses continued in the 1970s In 1973 a cross between a zebra and a donkey was foaled at the Jerusalem Zoo They called it a hamzab In the 1970s the Colchester Zoo in England bred zedonks at first by accident and later to create a disease resistant riding and draft animal The experiment was discontinued when zoos became more conservation minded A number of hybrids were kept at the zoo after this the last one died in 2009 16 As of 2010 one adult still remained at the tourist attraction of Groombridge Place 17 near Tunbridge Wells in Kent 21st century edit Today various zebroids are bred as riding and draft animals and as curiosities in circuses and smaller zoos A zorse more accurately a zony was born at Eden Ostrich World Cumbria England in 2001 after a zebra was left in a field with a Shetland pony It was referred to as a Zetland Usually a zebra stallion is paired with a horse mare or donkey jenny but in 2005 a Burchell s zebra mare named Allison produced a zonkey called Alex sired by a donkey jack at Highland Plantation in the parish of Saint Thomas Barbados Alex born 21 April 2005 is apparently the first zonkey in Barbados 18 In 2007 a horse stallion Ulysses and a zebra mare Eclipse produced a hebra named Eclyse displaying an unusually patchy color coating 19 20 In July 2010 a zonkey was born at the Chestatee Wildlife Preserve in Dahlonega Georgia 21 Another zebra donkey hybrid like the Barbados zonkey sired by a donkey was born 3 July 2011 in Haicang Safari Park Haicang Xiamen China 22 A zonkey Ippo was born 21 July 2013 in an animal reserve in Florence Italy 23 Khumba the offspring of a zebra mare and a dwarf albino donkey jack was born on 21 April 2014 in the zoo of Reynosa in the state of Tamaulipas Mexico 24 25 More recently in November 2018 at a farm in Somerset a cross between a donkey jack and a zebra mare was born 26 The male foal was described as a zonkey by its owner and has been named Zippy See also editEquid hybrid Hinny MuleReferences edit Zorse Breed Description Breeding References EquinePost Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Carter Helen 27 June 2001 Crisis hit farm welcomes its gift forse The Guardian London Retrieved 20 April 2010 it could be a zorse perhaps a fony or maybe a shebra or a zetland Whatever its name the arrival of the strange beast has been hailed as a godsend Zenkey foal a hybrid star The Sydney Morning Herald Agence France Presse 29 August 2003 Steiner Lee Rabinowitz 1954 Make the Most of Yourself A Psychological Guide for Normal People Prentice Hall p 251 Miranda Carolina A How the zonkey got its stripes Long before Instagram Tijuana s tourist donkeys were camera ready Los Angeles Times McCarthy Colman 1984 Involvements One Journalist s Place in the World Acropolis Books p 202 ISBN 9780874917574 Megersa B Biffa D Kumsa B 13 February 2007 A mysterious zebra donkey hybrid zedonk or zonkey produced under natural mating A case report from Borana southern Ethiopia Animal Production Research Advances 2 3 doi 10 4314 apra v2i3 36328 Benirschke K Low RJ Brownhill LE Caday LB Devenecia Fernandez J 1 April 1964 Chromosome Studies of a Donkey Grevy Zebra Hybrid Chromosoma 15 1 13 doi 10 1007 BF00326911 PMID 14171168 S2CID 41732666 Musilova P Kubickova S Vahala J Rubes J 27 March 2013 Subchromosomal karyotype evolution in Equidae Chromosome Research 21 2 175 187 doi 10 1007 s10577 013 9346 z ISSN 0967 3849 PMID 23532666 S2CID 16946384 K Benirschke et al 1964 Chromosome Studies of a Donkey Grevy Zebra Hybrid Chromosoma 15 1 1 13 doi 10 1007 BF00326911 PMID 14171168 S2CID 41732666 a b Jonsson Hakon Schubert Mikkel Seguin Orlando Andaine Ginolhac Aurelien Petersen Lillian Fumagalli Matteo Albrechtsen Anders Petersen Bent Korneliussen Thorfinn S Vilstrup Julia T Lear Teri 30 December 2014 Speciation with gene flow in equids despite extensive chromosomal plasticity Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111 52 18655 18660 Bibcode 2014PNAS 11118655J doi 10 1073 pnas 1412627111 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 4284605 PMID 25453089 Lau Allison N Peng Lei Goto Hiroki Chemnick Leona Ryder Oliver A Makova Kateryna D 1 January 2009 Horse Domestication and Conservation Genetics of Przewalski s Horse Inferred from Sex Chromosomal and Autosomal Sequences Molecular Biology and Evolution 26 1 199 208 doi 10 1093 molbev msn239 ISSN 0737 4038 PMID 18931383 a b Vilstrup Julia T Seguin Orlando Andaine Stiller Mathias Ginolhac Aurelien Raghavan Maanasa Nielsen Sandra C A Weinstock Jacobo Froese Duane Vasiliev Sergei K Ovodov Nikolai D Clary Joel 20 February 2013 Lalueza Fox Carles ed Mitochondrial Phylogenomics of Modern and Ancient Equids PLOS ONE 8 2 e55950 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 855950V doi 10 1371 journal pone 0055950 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3577844 PMID 23437078 Darwin Charles 2009 On the origin of species 1859 New York New York University Press pp 118 119 ISBN 978 0814720585 Wonders of Animal Life edited by J A Hammerton 1930 Colchester Zoo mourns the loss of Shadow the Zeedonk Press release Colchester Zoo 3 April 2009 Archived from the original on 8 July 2011 The Enchanted Forest Groombridge Place Gardens Archived from the original on 29 July 2010 Call it zonkey or a deebra Zebra has a foal sired by a donkey NBC News Associated Press 29 April 2005 Retrieved 13 October 2008 Amanda Billner Zebran ar en hast Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine in Swedish Dagens Nyheter s webpage 28 June 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2007 BBC Half horse half zebra hebra Archived 4 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 3 July 2007 Zebra donkey hybrid born in Dahlonega Gainesville Times 27 July 2010 Donkra Cross between Donkey Zebra born 3 News 5 July 2011 It s a zonkey Zebra and donkey hybrid born in Italy Daily News New York Archived from the original on 27 July 2013 Zonkey born in a zoo in Mexico The Telegraph 25 April 2014 Archived from the original on 26 April 2014 Retrieved 26 April 2014 https abc7 com donkey zebra cross breed baby zonkey 43631 Rare cross between donkey and zebra known as zonkey born on Somerset farm The Independent Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 Retrieved 6 November 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zorses nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article The Zoologist 4th series vol 2 1898 Issue 680 On Zebra Horse Hybrids Hybrid Equines Information and images of different zebroids Eclyse Photo of a zebroid named Eclyse BBC News 26 June 2001 Zebra Hybrid is Cute Surprise Metro 28 June 2007 A single zorsed story Archived 3 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine Dorsett Katherine What the heck is a zedonk CNN 23 September 2010 The International Zebra Zorse Zonkey Association Archived 2 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Video of a Zorse Rare zebra donkey mix born in Florence animal reserve The zonkey named Ippo only one in Italy 1 27 minute video of a zedonk bred and raised in Trinidad www minizonkey com Stuart FL News July 18 2017 Stuart FL News October 5 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zebroid amp oldid 1223226516, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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