Click For Home - equiworld.net and the logo device are copyright 1996.
Equestrian Chat Rooms and Message Boardsequiworld.net Horse Site IndexHow To Contact The equiworld.net TeamNeed Help Using Equiworld?
Equiworld, for real horse power.
Special Sections for Members
Equestrian Products and Product Reviews
Information on Horse Care and Breeds
HorseLinks and Equestrian Search Engine
Sports, Events and Results
equiworld.net On-Line Equestrian Magazine
Riding Holidays and Travel
Training and Education of Horse and Rider
Equestrian Services
Advertise Your Equestrian Company Here






 

Mongolian wild horse

The Mongolian Horse
 The Mongolian Horse
The Sorraia Horse
 The Sorraia horse
 Its color is dun, but with the pattern superimposed that is also found in the Exmoor: mealy mouth, lighter-colored rings around the eyes, lighter areas on the inside of the legs, under the belly, in the flanks. Typically, Przewalski's horse also doesn't have the bi-colored mane and tail found in the Sorraia and Tarpan - the dark middle part is fringed some by hair of the body color. A dorsal stripe is present, leg stripes often absent. The Sorraia has a dark face and muzzle area, is of fairly uniform color, a dark zone - almost like a stripe - runs under the middle of its belly. The neck is slender and the withers prominent. While the rear end of the Mongolian wild horse is heavier, in the Sorraia the front end - shoulder, withers, and depth of chest - is more dominant

The Mongolian wild horse (Equus przewalskii Poljakow) is the only wild horse recognized by all zoologists as a pure wild form in the zoological sense. This has led to the theory that is the ancestor to all our domestic horses. This theory is disseminated as fact in most books and articles today. However, Japanese geneticists have documented in 1995 through mtDNA analyses that Mongolian wild horse, or Przewalsi's horse, is NOT an ancestor of our domestic horses!

This issue is being made complicated by the fact that, because Przewalski's horse is the only wild horse scientifically described and documented, and it belongs - together with all other horses - to the same species, its zoological name must apply to all of today's horses according to zoological nomenclature systematics.

So, if it is said that all horses stem from Equus przewalskii, that is correct and wrong at the same time: if it is supposed to mean they stem from Przewalski's horse, i.e. the Mongolian wild horse, it is wrong; if it is meant to say that whatever wild ancestors there were of our domestic stock, they would all belong to the species Equus przewalskii, it would be correct. The Mongolian wild horse, or Przewalski's horse, stems from the same root as all other horses we know, but it does not represent this root!

Some zoologists and paleo-zoologists think that there were several forms of wild horses that our domestic horses derived from. One such form is still around in the British Exmoor pony, another one in the Sorraia horse. It would be foolish to claim the Sorraia horse to be pure anymore, but its status is most likely that of a direct descendant of an ancestral form, the closest thing we have left to that form.
The Mongolian wild horse survived in zoos all over the world. It, too, isn't pure anymore, but it is still a good representative of the original subspecies.

Back to the Sorraia horse