Przewalski's horse  (Equus ferus przewalskii)

Przewalski's horse, head detail

Facts

Also known as:Takh and Takhi
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Mammalia
Order Perissodactyla
Family Equidae
Genus Equus (1)
Size Head-body length: 210 cm (2)
Tail length: 90 cm (2)
Weight 350 kg (2)

Status

Classified as Extinct in the Wild (EW-) by the IUCN Red List 2002 (1), and listed on Appendix I of CITES (7).

Description

Classified as Extinct in the Wild, Przewalski's horse is the last true wild horse, and the only ancestor of the domestic horse that has survived to the present day (2). The common name refers to the Russian explorer Nikolai Przewalski who first discovered the subspecies in the 1870s (2). This wild horse has a stocky body with robust, short legs (2), a short neck and a powerful jaw (3). The back and sides are dun to greyish-brown in colour, the head has a mealy nose and there is a dark stripe along the back (6). These horses have erect manes with no forelock and only the lower part of the tail is covered with long black hair; the upper part of the dock having shorter, light coloured hairs (6).

Range

Wild horses (Equus ferus) lived in Europe and Asia 10 - 15 thousand years ago before being pushed back to the furthest limits of their range (5). Przewalski's horse ended up in Asia and the final abode of the subspecies was in southwest Mongolia where the last wild specimen was recorded in 1968 (2). Subsequently, captive-bred individuals have been released in Mongolia (4).

Habitat

Przewalski's horse occupied steppe vegetation and shrubland (5).

Biology

Przewalski's horse feeds on grasses and other plants, while in captivity it also takes hay and grain (3). Most of the day is spent foraging, as it feeds on food with a low nutritional content. In the wild, Przewalski's horse occurred in family groups led by a dominant stallion, juveniles were ousted and the males formed their own bachelor groups before attempting to take over a band of females (5). In captivity, births occur in April/May but in the wild the season is later and more likely to be May/June (6). Gestation takes between eleven and twelve months and foals are able to stand as soon as one hour after birth (3). A week after giving birth, females come into heat and will mate again (6).

Threats

Habitat degradation, human activities including hunting and conflict, along with competition with domestic livestock for water and forage are all thought to be responsible for the extinction of Przewalski's horse in the wild (3). The last reported wild individual was seen in 1968 (2).

Conservation

After the subspecies became Extinct in the Wild, it clung on in a number of small populations in various zoos around the world. In 1977, the Foundation for the Preservation and Protection of the Przewalski's horse (FPPPH) was established in the Netherlands with the long-term aim of returning this ancient horse to the wild (5). At that time there were around 300 horses in zoos and parks and their breeding was managed in order to prevent inbreeding (5). In the 1990s, The Mongolian Association for Conservation of Nature and the Environment (MACNE) and the FPPPH collaborated to reintroduce a number of individuals in small herds into the Hustai National Park in central Mongolia (4). The national symbol was a welcome return to the area and part of an important drive to save the steppe biotope (5). Today, more than 120 Przewalski's horses live in Hustai and a further conservation programme run by the International Takhi Group (a consortium of European takhi breeding institutions) together with the Mongolian Commission for Endangered Species has introduced a further 50 horses to an area in the Dzungarian Gobi in Southwest Mongolia (6). The return of the Przewalski's horse to its natural environment is a success story for conservation and, despite ongoing problems, it is hoped that at least two large, self-sustained populations will soon be a reality (4).

Further Information

For further information on this conservation initiative see:

Authentication

Authenticated (7/5/02) by Inge Bouman. Chairman, FPPPH.
http://www.treemail.nl/takh/

Subspecies: a different race of a species, which is geographically separated from other populations of that species.

References

  1. IUCN Red List (December, 2002)
    www.redlist.org
  2. Macdonald, D. (2001) The New Encyclopaedia of Mammals. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
  3. Animal Diversity Web (April, 2002)
    http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/equus/e._caballus_przewalskii$narrative.html
  4. The Takhi Story (April, 2002)
    http://www.takhi.org
  5. FPPPH booklet (April, 2002)
    http://www.treemail.nl/takh/downloads/booklet.pdf
  6. Bouman, I. (April, 2002) Pers. comm.
  7. CITES (October, 2002)
    www.cites.org