Zorse | The zorse is a cross between a zebra stallion and a domestic mare.
It is also possible to use a zebra mare and a domestic stallion, but
owners of valuable zebra mares don't want to waste a year of their
breeding life producing a hybrid when they could be producing a zebra
foal instead. The crosses were originally done in England and Africa to
try to produce a domestic horselike animal that was resistant to diseases spread by the tse tse fly in Africa. Zebras have natural resistance, where domestic donkeys and horses do not. The experimental crosses were actually becoming popular until early in the 20th century when the auto displaced the horse
and mule. At that point cross-breeding was largely abandoned. A revival
of interest came in the early 1990s, with just about every breed of
domestic horse imaginable being tried.
A zorse generally inherits the striping pattern and some of the conformation of the zebra sire with the size, colouration, and temperament of the domestic mare. Coarse bad tempered pony mares produce coarse bad tempered zonies. Mares of quality, especially Quarter horses and American Paint horses,
produce some very beautiful zorses that have a good working attitude.
If the mare has a pattern, such as pinto spotting or Appy spots, the
zorse often will also. You only see the striping pattern on the
pigmented areas, never on the white areas. Breeders avoid using gray
mares because the zorse can inherit the graying gene and lose all his
stripes in a few years! You can still see the stripes on the skin.
Like mules, zorses are
born anatomically normal males or females. They exhibit normal breeding
behaviour. But like mules they are sterile. Males should be gelded as
early as a few months old to prevent dangerous studdy behaviour. A
breeder in KY keeps two zorse mares in the pasture with his Paint
stallion to keep him company. He has bred them both hundreds of times
over the years but no offspring have ever resulted.
Zorses tend to be very hardy and live into their 30s with good care. Their temperaments
are generally similar to those of their mothers, but like the zebra
they do have a strong flight response. Because of this it's best for a
first time hybrid owner to get a zedonk instead. When a zedonk startles
he freezes up like a donkey rather than bolt blindly like a horse or zebra.
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