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Przewalski's Horse

Class: Mammalia
Order: Perissodactyla
Family: Equidae
Genus: Equus
Species: przewalskii

 

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ASIAN WILD HORSE (Przewalski's Horse) CONTINUED

Habits and Adaptations: Size of the herd can range from 6 to 16 animals (a stallion, several adult mares, 2 year old horses, a few yearlings and the current year's foals). The stallion is the group's leader and protector. When danger threatens, the mares and young animals line up with a young stallion at their head and a mature stallion guarding the rear. Generally travel in single file. Communications between horses is visual, auditory and olfactory. Examples include ear positions, neighing and "flehmen" During "flehmen" one horse sniffs another's urine, then raises its head and draws back its lips while wrinkling the nostrils. In the spring, when winter coats begin to shed, horses will help the process by grooming one another with their teeth as they stand side by side and head to tail.

Diet: In the wild, they eat coarse, shrubby vegetation and tall grasses. In captivity, the basic element is hay. Mixed grains are often added, as well as vitamin and mineral supplements when necessary.

Breeding and Maturation: Mares are sexually mature between 3 and 5 years of age, stallions a year or so later. Gestation is about 11 months and most foals are born with fuzzy mane and weigh 25-27 kg (55-60 lbs). Generally, foals stay with their mother for 2 years.

Miscellaneous:The existence of these horses was first reported to the western world in the late 1800's by Nicolai Przewalski, a Russian explorer. Later, he was presented with a hide and skull of a wild horse by native hunters. That hide and skull are still on display in a museum in Leningrad.

 

 

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