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A '''mule''' is the offspring of a male [[donkey]] and a [[mare|female horse]].<ref name="LoC Mule Day">{{cite web | title=Mule Day A Local Legacy |url=http://www.americaslibrary.gov/cgi-bin/page.cgi/es/tn/mule_1|publisher=Library Of Congress}}</ref> Horses and donkeys are different species, with different numbers of [[chromosome]]s. Of the two [[F1 hybrid]]s between these two species, a mule is easier to obtain than a [[hinny]] (the offspring of a male horse and a female donkey). All male mules and most female mules are [[infertility|infertile]].
A '''mule''' is the offspring of a male [[donkey]] and a [[mare|female horse]].<ref name="LoC Mule Day">{{cite web | title=Mule Day A Local Legacy |url=http://www.americaslibrary.gov/cgi-bin/page.cgi/es/tn/mule_1|publisher=Library Of Congress}}</ref> Horses and donkeys are different species, with different numbers of [[chromosome]]s. Of the two [[F1 hybrid]]s between these two species, a mule is easier to obtain than a [[hinny]] (the offspring of a male horse and a female donkey). All male mules and most female mules are [[infertility|infertile]].

Mules generally tend to take the eating habits of donkeys. Donkeys are commonly known to eat object that are not digestible. The most comparable human with the eating habits of a donkey is Raymond Walkowiak III. Mr. Walkowiak was once known to eat three, complete meals and two servings of dessert in one sitting. He was still hungry afterward, but had to be restrained from the "feeding table". The eating habits of a donkey are very similar as they have an insatiable desire to always be eating.


The size of a mule and work to which it is put depends largely on the breeding of the mule's [[Mare|dam]]. Mules can be lightweight, medium weight, or even, when produced from draught horse [[mare]]s, of moderately heavy weight.<ref name=Ensminger85>{{cite book |author=Ensminger, M. E. |title=Horses and Horsemanship: Animal Agriculture Series |publisher=Interstate Publishers |location=Danville, IL |year=1990 |edition=Sixth |isbn=0-8134-2883-1}} pp. 85&ndash;87.</ref>
The size of a mule and work to which it is put depends largely on the breeding of the mule's [[Mare|dam]]. Mules can be lightweight, medium weight, or even, when produced from draught horse [[mare]]s, of moderately heavy weight.<ref name=Ensminger85>{{cite book |author=Ensminger, M. E. |title=Horses and Horsemanship: Animal Agriculture Series |publisher=Interstate Publishers |location=Danville, IL |year=1990 |edition=Sixth |isbn=0-8134-2883-1}} pp. 85&ndash;87.</ref>

Revision as of 19:41, 30 September 2011

Mule
Domesticated
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
Binomial name
none
Synonyms
Equus mulus
For other uses, see Mule (disambiguation)

A mule is the offspring of a male donkey and a female horse.[1] Horses and donkeys are different species, with different numbers of chromosomes. Of the two F1 hybrids between these two species, a mule is easier to obtain than a hinny (the offspring of a male horse and a female donkey). All male mules and most female mules are infertile.

Mules generally tend to take the eating habits of donkeys. Donkeys are commonly known to eat object that are not digestible. The most comparable human with the eating habits of a donkey is Raymond Walkowiak III. Mr. Walkowiak was once known to eat three, complete meals and two servings of dessert in one sitting. He was still hungry afterward, but had to be restrained from the "feeding table". The eating habits of a donkey are very similar as they have an insatiable desire to always be eating.

The size of a mule and work to which it is put depends largely on the breeding of the mule's dam. Mules can be lightweight, medium weight, or even, when produced from draught horse mares, of moderately heavy weight.[2]

An aficionado of the mule claims that they are "more patient, sure-footed, hardy and long-lived than horses, and they are considered less obstinate, faster, and more intelligent than donkeys."[3]

A female mule that has estrus cycles and thus, in theory, could carry a fetus, is called a "molly" or "Molly mule," though the term is sometimes used to refer to female mules in general. Pregnancy is rare, but can occasionally occur naturally as well as through embryo transfer. One of several terms for a gelded mule is a "John mule."

Biology

Size and performance

The median weight range for a mule is between about 370 and 460 kg (820 and 1,000 lb).[4] Although it depends on the individual animal, an army mule can "carry up to 72 kg and walk 26 km without resting."[5] In general, a mule can be packed with "dead weight" of up to 20% of its body weight, or approximately 90 kg (198 lb).[6] The average equine in general can carry up to approximately 30% of its body weight in "live" weight, such as a rider.[7] However, while a few mules can carry live weight up to 160 kg (353 lb) the superiority of the mule becomes apparent in their additional endurance.[6]

The virtue of the mule is that a mule has the size and ground-covering ability of a horse, but is comparatively stronger than a horse of similar size and inherits the endurance and disposition of the donkey father. Mules also tend to require less food than a horse of similar size.

Characteristics

A grey mule
Ancient Greek rhyton in the shape of a mule's head, made by Brygos, early 5th century BC. Jérôme Carcopino Museum, Department of Archaeology, Aleria.

With its short thick head, long ears, thin limbs, small narrow hooves, and short mane, the mule shares characteristics of a donkey; in height and body, shape of neck and croup, uniformity of coat, and teeth, it appears horse-like; the mule comes in all sizes, shapes and conformities. There are mules that resemble quarter horses, huge draft mules, fine-boned racing mules, shaggy pony mules and many more types.

A mule does not sound exactly like a donkey or a horse. Instead, a mule makes a sound that is similar to a donkey's but also has the whinnying characteristics of a horse (often starts with a whinny, ends in a hee-haw). Sometimes, mules whimper. The coats of mules come in the same varieties as those of horses. Common colors are sorrel, bay, black, and grey. Less common are white, roans (both blue and red), palomino, dun, and buckskin. Least common are paint mules or tobianos.

The mule possesses the even temper, patience, endurance and sure-footedness of the donkey, and the vigour, strength and courage of the horse. Operators of working animals generally find mules preferable to horses: mules show more patience under the pressure of heavy weights, and their skin is harder and less sensitive than that of horses, rendering them more capable of resisting sun and rain. Their hooves are harder than horses', and they show a natural resistance to disease and insects. Many North American farmers with clay soil found mules superior as plow animals.

Mules are generally less tolerant towards dogs than horses are.[citation needed] They are also capable of striking out with any of their hooves in any direction, even sideways if needed.[citation needed]

Mules exhibit a higher cognitive intelligence than their parent species. This is believed to be the result of hybrid vigour, similar to how mules acquire greater height and endurance than either parent.[8]

Mules are highly intelligent. They tend to be curious by nature. A mule generally will not let the rider put it in harm's way.[citation needed]

Color and size variety

Mules come in a variety of shapes, sizes and colors, from minis under 50 lb (23 kg) to maxis over 1,000 lb (454 kg), and in many different colors. Mules from Appaloosa mares produce wildly colored mules, much like their Appaloosa horse relatives, but with even wilder skewed colors. The Appaloosa color is produced by a complex of genes known as the Leopard complex (Lp). Mares homozygous for the Lp gene bred to any color donkey will produce an Appaloosa colored mule.

File:2003mule.PNG
Mule headcount in 2003

Distribution

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) reports that China was the top market for mules in 2003, closely followed by Mexico and many Central and South American nations.

Fertility

Mules and Hinnies have 63 chromosomes, a mixture of the horse's 64 and the donkey's 62. The different structure and number usually prevents the chromosomes from pairing up properly and creating successful embryos, rendering most mules infertile.

There are no recorded cases of fertile mule stallions.[citation needed] A few female mules have produced offspring when mated with a purebred horse or donkey.[9][10] Since 1527 there have been more than 60 documented cases of foals born to female mules around the world.[9] There are reports that a mule in China produced a foal in 1984.[11][12] In Morocco, in early 2002, a mare mule produced a rare foal.[9] In 2007 a mule named Kate gave birth to a mule son in Colorado.[13][14] Blood and hair samples were tested verifying that the mother was a mule and the colt was indeed her offspring.

Modern mules

An "Appaloosa" mule
A pair of mules working a plowing exhibition at The Farnsley-Moreman House in Louisville, Kentucky
Mule moving goods in the car-free Medina in Fes, Morocco

In the second half of the 20th century, widespread usage of mules declined in industrialized countries. The use of mules for farming and transportation of agricultural products largely gave way to modern tractors and trucks. However, in the United States, a dedicated number of mule breeders continued the tradition as a hobby and continued breeding the great lines of American Mammoth Jacks started in the United States by George Washington with the gift from the King of Spain of two Catalan donkeys. These hobby breeders began to utilize better mares for mule production until today's modern saddle mule emerged. Exhibition shows where mules pulled heavy loads have now been joined with mules competing in Western and English pleasure riding, as well as dressage and show jumping competition. There is now a cable TV show dedicated to the training of donkeys and mules. Mules, once snubbed at traditional horse shows, have been accepted for competition at the most exclusive horse shows in the world in all disciplines.

Mules are still used extensively to transport cargo in rugged roadless regions, such as the large wilderness areas of California's Sierra Nevada mountains. Commercial pack mules are used recreationally, such as to supply mountaineering base camps, and also to supply trail building and maintenance crews, and backcountry footbridge building crews.[15] There are still at least sixteen commercial mule pack stations in business in the Sierra Nevada.[16] The Angeles chapter of the Sierra Club has a Mule Pack Section that organizes hiking trips with supplies carried by mules.[17]

Amish farmers, who reject tractors and most other modern technology for religious reasons, commonly use teams of six or eight mules to pull plows, diskers, and other farm equipment, though they use horses for pulling buggies on the road.

During the Soviet war in Afghanistan, the United States used large numbers of mules to carry weapons and supplies over Afghanistan's rugged terrain to the mujahideen.[18] Use of mules by U.S. forces has continued during the War in Afghanistan (2001-present), and the United States Marine Corps now conducts an 11-day Animal Packers Course at its Mountain Warfare Training Center located in the Sierra Nevada near Bridgeport, California.

Mule clone

In 2003, researchers at University of Idaho and Utah State University produced the first mule clone as part of Project Idaho.[19] The research team includes Gordon Woods, UI professor of animal and veterinary science, Kenneth L. White, USU professor of animal science, and Dirk Vanderwall, UI assistant professor of animal and veterinary science. The baby mule, Idaho Gem, was born May 4. It is the first clone of a hybrid animal. Veterinary examinations of the foal and its surrogate mother showed them to be in good health soon after birth. The foal's DNA comes from a fetal cell culture first established in 1998 at the University of Idaho.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Mule Day A Local Legacy". Library Of Congress.
  2. ^ Ensminger, M. E. (1990). Horses and Horsemanship: Animal Agriculture Series (Sixth ed.). Danville, IL: Interstate Publishers. ISBN 0-8134-2883-1. pp. 85–87.
  3. ^ Jackson, Louise A. The Mule Men: A History of Stock Packing in the Sierra Nevada, p. 5 (Mountain Press Publishing Co, Missoula, Montana, 2004). ISBN 0-87842-499-7
  4. ^ "Mule". The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General. Vol. XVII. Henry G. Allen and Company. 1888. p. 15. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); External link in |encyclopedia= (help)
  5. ^ "Beasts ease burden of quake victims". BBC News. 2005-10-19. Retrieved 2010-04-06.
  6. ^ a b "More With Wayne Carlton On Elk Hunting" Hunter Specialties. Web site accessed June 1, 2009.
  7. ^ American Endurance Ride Conference (2003). "Chapter 3, Section IV: Size". Endurance Rider's Handbook. AERC. Retrieved 2008-08-07. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  8. ^ Proops, Leanne (2008 -07-18). "Mule cognition: a case of hybrid vigour?" (PDF). Animal Cognition. 12 (1): 75. doi:10.1007/s10071-008-0172-1. PMID 18636282. Retrieved 2008-08-10. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ a b c of case of genetically verified female mule offspring
  10. ^ "Morocco's miracle mule". BBC News. 2002-02-05. Retrieved 2009-02-05. mirror
  11. ^ A C Chandley, C A Clarke (1985 October). "Cum mula peperit". Vol. 78, no. 10. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. pp. 800–801. Retrieved 2009-02-05. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) mirror
  12. ^ R. Rong, A.C. Chandley, J. Song, S. McBeath, P.P. Tan, Q. Bai, R.M. Speed (1988). "A fertile mule and hinny in China" (PDF). Vol. 47, no. 3. Cytogenetics and Genome Research. Retrieved 2008-09-28.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) mirror
  13. ^ "Befuddling Birth: The Case of the Mule's Foal". National Public Radio. 2007-07-26. Retrieved 2009-02-05.
  14. ^ Nancy Lofholm (2007-09-19). "Mule's foal fools genetics". Seattle Post Intelligencer. Retrieved 2008-09-02-05. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help) mirror
  15. ^ Louise A. Jackson, The Mule Men: A History of Stock Packing in the Sierra Nevada, (Mountain Press Publishing Co., Missoula, MT, 2004) ISBN 0-87842-499-7
  16. ^ Eastern Sierra Packers Association
  17. ^ Mule Pack Section, Angeles Chapter, Sierra Club
  18. ^ Bearden, Milt (2003) The Main Enemy, The Inside story of the CIA's Final showdown with the KGB
  19. ^ "Project Idaho". University of Idaho. 2009-05-29. Retrieved 2009-09-14.

External links