SEARCH...:


recently watched....:
  • Onager [en]
  • 梅若六郎 (55世) [ja]
  • Ofbeeldienge:Autonomous communities of Spain.svg [vls]
  • 1930 [vls]
  • 画像:R03.png [ja]
  • Hex [sv]
  • .ua [ms]
  • 粉絲 [zh-yue]
  • パンチョ・ビリャ [ja]
  • 中學 [zh-yue]
  • Operational definition [en]

  • jetzt mitverdienen


    Der freche Erotikshop!
    02 Logo 120x60

    Party Explosion - Click here!
    Final Fantasy III DS game

    Miller Brothers, Click here!
    www.easycar.com
    Estate
    Win a Supercar of your dreams........make Summer special this year

    00003 ORION - Logo
    Fancy a hot adventure? More fun for HIM and HER – Shopping at PABO.com!

    LANGUAGE: ar | id | bg | ca | ceb | cs | da | de | et | en / / | es | eo | fr | gr | he | hr it | ko | lt | hu | nl | ja | no | pl | pt | ru | ro | sk | sl | sr | fi | sv | te | tr | uk | zh

    Onager

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jump to: navigation, search
    Onager

    Conservation status
    Scientific classification
    Kingdom: Animalia
    Phylum: Chordata
    Class: Mammalia
    Order: Perissodactyla
    Family: Equidae
    Genus: Equus
    Subgenus: Asinus
    Species: E. hemionus
    Binomial name
    Equus hemionus
    Pallas, 1775

    The Onager (Equus hemionus) is a large mammal belonging to the horse family and native to the deserts of Syria, Iran, Pakistan, India, Israel, and Tibet. It is sometimes known as the Asian Wild Ass.

    Like many other large grazing animals, its range has contracted greatly under the pressures of hunting and habitat loss, and of the six subspecies, one is extinct and two endangered. The Kiang (E. kiang), a Tibetan relative, was previously considered to be a subspecies of the Onager as E. hemionus kiang, but recent molecular studies indicate that it is a distinct species.

    Onagers are a little larger than donkeys at about 290 kg and 2.1 metres (head-body length), and are a little more horse-like. They are short-legged compared to horses, and their coloring varies depending on the season. They are generally reddish-brown in color during the summer, becoming yellowish-brown in the winter months. They have a black stripe bordered in white that extends down the middle of the back. They are notoriously untameable. Equids were used in ancient Sumer to pull wagons circa 2600 BC, and then chariots on the Standard of Ur, circa 2000 BC. These have been suggested to represent Onagers, but are now thought to have been domestic asses. (Clutton-Brock, 1992)

    [edit] Subspecies


    [edit] References

    • Moehlman, Shah & Feh (2008). Equus hemionus. 2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2008. Retrieved on 14 Oct 2008. Database entry includes justification for why this species is Endangered
    • Duncan, P. (ed.). 1992. Zebras, Asses, and Horses: an Action Plan for the Conservation of Wild Equids. IUCN/SSC Equid Specialist Group. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.
    • Moehlman, P. & Feh, C. 2002. Equus hemionus. In: IUCN 2004. 2004 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 21 January 2006.
    • Clutton-Brock, Juliet (1992). Horse Power: A History of the Horse and the Donkey in Human Societies. USA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674406469. 

    [edit] External links

    Change language: All | الرربية | Bahasa Indonesia | Български | Català | Cebuano | Ħesky | Dansk | Deutsch | Eesti | English | Español | Esperanto | Français | עברית | Hrvatski | Italiano | 핶국어 | Lietuvių | Magyar | Nederlands | 旡涬語 | Norsk (bokmál) | Polski | Português | Русскиб | Română | Slovenčina | Slovenščina | Српски / Srpski | Suomi | Svenska | తెలుగు | Türkçe | УкраїнсѦка | 中文

    Autorem skryptu AdWiki v0.8 (2007) jest husky83
    Wikipedia jest zarejestrowanym znakiem towarowym Wikimedia Foundation
    Wszystkie materiały pochodzą z Wikipedii, obięte są licencją GNU Free Documentation License