The other day, I went down the rabbit hole of "cute donkeys" and came up with my head full of things I didn't know about mules (the hybrid offspring of a horse and a donkey), and why they were once so coveted as work animals.
Brace for info dump, while enjoying this lovely photo of a trio of draft mules.
The explanation is hybrid vigour (when hybrid offspring have enhanced traits compared to its parents):
Mules are stronger, hardier, healthier, have better endurance, harder hooves, sturdier skin and can handle extreme weather better than horses or donkeys. They are also more patient, more intelligent, and easier to handle than either of their parent species. Horses may be faster, but that's about the single thing they're better at than a mule of the same size.
So mules, being all around nicer to work with and getting you more work for the same amount of feed, and with less hassle, were preferred for just about every job purpose.
Habby du Magnou, a Poitevin Mulassier mare, and her daughter Lady du Magnou, a rare Poitevin mule
But since horses have 64 chromosomes and donkeys have 62, mules end up with 63 chromosomes, which means they are almost invariably sterile. That's because biology gets very confused when trying to split an uneven number of chromosomes neatly in half to create germ cells. There are a few documented exceptions of fertile mule mares (never stallions), but they are very, very rare. So you have to keep crossbreeding the two parent species to produce them, usually by breeding a donkey sire (jack) to a horse dam (mare). This is because it's easier for a 32 chromosome egg to incorporate a 31 chromosome sperm into a viable zygote (fertilised egg) than vice versa.
Because of this, there was (and still is) in France a breed of absolutely massive draft horses, the Poitevin Mulassier, and a breed of big-ass donkeys (pun intended, but honestly they're arguably the largest donkeys in the world, and shaggy like Highland cattle), the Baudet du Poitou, two breeds whose main purpose was to breed the enormous and super-strong Poitevin mule.
The Poitevin mule
This absolute unit was the must-have work-animal for all kinds of farm and industrial work for centuries, and a significant French export, until mechanisation made these magnificent creatures obsolete.
With no demand for the Poitevin mule , its parent breeds dwindled, almost to the brink of extinction. Determined conservation efforts during the last few decades are slowly bringing their numbers back up, but they're very far from their heyday, when some 20,000 Poitevin mules were born annually.
The Poitevin Mulassier
Both the parent breeds are still endangered, which means most of the current effort is directed into bringing up the numbers of Poitevin horses and Poitou donkeys. This means breeding horses to horses and donkeys to donkeys, with very few breeding opportunities allowed to produce the Poitevin mule. Only about 20 of those are born each year.
The Baudet du Poitou
38K notes
·
View notes
Habby du Magnou, meilleure note des Traits poitevins du concours de Melle. Pouliche de 2 ans : 86/100. (Photo : Baptiste Vivinus)
i read this post on the breeding of poitevin mules and was enthralled and educated but also i just thought habby du magnou was the most beautiful girl i'd ever seen??? so i went looking for more pix and found this one from 2019 and i'm here to announce that i'm in love with her. if you want to look at her prizewinning donkey counterpart from the same year he's here and very fuzzy. :D
13 notes
·
View notes
les 2 chevaux, Piré-s/Seiche, 21 mai 2020
les 2 chevaux, Piré-s/Seiche, 21 mai 2020
2 chevaux vivent à l’espace naturel départemental près du château des Pères à Piré s/Seiche. Ce sont apparemment des “Poitevins mulassiers”. “Mulassier”. Intrigant et pas très joli ( pas très loin de “putassier”). L’histoire de cette race façonnée par l’humain – toutes les “races” ont été façonnées par l’humain – est intéressante : Les juments poitevines sont utilisées pour faire naître – mais…
View On WordPress
0 notes