Baudet du Poitou
Other names |
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Country of origin | France |
Traits | |
Distinguishing features | Tall donkey with very shaggy coat |
Classification | |
Ministry of Agriculture (France) | Breed standard |
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The Poitou donkey[1] or Poitou ass[2] (Template:Lang-fr), also called the Poitevin donkey[1] or simply the Poitou, is a breed of donkey originating in the Poitou region of France. It is one of the largest donkey breeds, and was selected for size so that it could be used for the production of large working mules, in conjunction with the Poitevin horse breed. It is known for its distinctive coat, called a cadanette, which hangs in long, ungroomed cords. Breeders originally prized the coats highly, but today, many Poitou donkeys are shorn for hygienic reasons.
Poitous developed in the French Poitou region, possibly from donkeys introduced to the area by the Romans. They may have been a status symbol during the Middle Ages, and by the early 18th century, their physical characteristics had been established. A studbook for the breed was established in France in 1884, and the 19th and early 20th centuries saw them being used for the production of mules throughout Europe. During this same time, Poitou bloodlines were also used to develop other donkey breeds, including the American Mammoth Jack in the United States. Increasing mechanization in the mid-20th century saw a decline in the need for, and hence population of, the breed, and by 1977, a survey found only 44 members worldwide. Conservation efforts were begun by a number of public and private breeders and organizations, and by 2005 there were 450 purebred Poitou donkeys.
Description
The Poitou donkey is "instantly recognizable"[3] for a number of unusual characteristics that distinguish it from other donkeys. Its shaggy coat, called a cadanette, hangs in long cords when ungroomed because of the long, soft hair. Animals with great cadanettes of matted and tangled hair were most highly valued. A purebred Poitou has a more massive bone structure and a larger foot than a part-bred animal, but the shaggy coat is such a dominant trait that even a 1/8 Poitou donkey may resemble a pure-bred. In modern times, the coat is still considered important but less so than size and measurements. Today, many Poitou donkeys are shorn for the purpose of hygiene, but some are allowed to grow their coats out so as to have "bourailloux", or coats of great length. The coat is always dark brown or black. While lacking the stripes and cross-like markings on the coats of some other breeds of donkey, the Poitou should have a white underbelly, nose and rings around its eyes.[1][3]
The Poitou donkey is a large breed; among other European donkeys only the Andalucian donkey reaches a similar size. In order to breed large mules, the original breeders of the Poitou chose animals with large features, such as ears, heads and leg joints. The ears developed to such an extent that their weight sometimes causes them to be carried horizontally. Minimum height is 1.40 m (55 in) for jacks and 1.35 m (53 in) for jennies.[4] They have large, long heads, strong necks, long backs, short croups and round haunches. The limb joints and feet are large, and the legs strong.[1] The temperament of the Poitou has been described as "friendly, affectionate and docile".[5] Historically, most Poitou donkeys were used to breed large mules, but in recent years, they have found an increasing number of uses. Breed enthusiasts use them for agricultural work, driving and riding.[6]
History
The exact origins of the Poitou breed are unknown, but donkeys and their use in the breeding of mules may have been introduced to the Poitou region of France by the Roman Empire. The Baudet de Poitou (donkey of Poitou), and the Mulassière (mule breeder) horse breed (also known as the Poitevin) were developed together for the use of producing superior mules. In the Middle Ages, owning a Poitou donkey may have been a status symbol among the local French nobility. It is not known when the Poitou's distinctive characteristics were gained but they seem to have been well-developed by 1717 when an advisor to King Louis XV described:[1]
There is found, in northern Poitou, donkeys which are as tall as large mules. They are almost completely covered in hair a half-foot long with legs and joints as large as a those of a carriage horse.
In the mid-1800s, Poitou mules were "regarded as the finest and strongest in France",[7] and between 15,000 and 18,000 were sold annually.[7] In 1884, a studbook was established for the Poitou donkey in France.[2] During the first half of the 20th century, the mules bred by the Poitou and the Poitevin continued to be desired throughout Europe, and were called the "finest working mule in the world".[1] Purchasers paid higher prices for Poitou mules than for other mules, and up to 30,000 mules were bred annually in the Poitou region,[1] with some estimates putting the number as high as 50,000.[8] As mechanization increased around World War II, mules became outmoded, and population numbers for both mules and donkeys dropped dramatically.[1]
Poitou donkey and mule breeders were extremely protective of their breeding practices, some of which were "highly unusual and misguided."[7] Jacks were kept in closed-in stalls throughout the year once they had begun covering mares, in often unhygienic conditions. Once the mares had been covered, a folk belief held that if they were underfed, they would produce colts, which were more valuable, rather than fillies. This often led to mares being starved during their pregnancies. Colostrum, vital for foal development, was considered unhealthy and withheld from newborns. A lack of breeding records resulted in fertility problems,[7] and there was a significant amount of foal mortality, due to jacks being used to cover horse mares before jennies of their own kind, resulting in late-born foals that were vulnerable to cold fall and winter temperatures.[8] Despite these husbandry issues, one author, writing in 1883, stated that "mule-breeding is about the only branch of agricultural industry in which France has no rival abroad, owing its prosperity entirely to the zeal of those engaged in it."[8]
Conservation efforts
A 1977 inventory revealed only 44 Poitou donkeys worldwide,[9] and there were still fewer than 80 animals as of 1980.[2] Conservation efforts were led by several public and private groups in France. In 1979, the Haras Nationaux, (the French national stud) and the Parc Naturel Regional du Marais Poitevin, working with private breeders, launched an effort to improve the genetics of the Poitou, develop new breeding techniques and collect traditional knowledge on the breed. In 1981, 18 large donkeys from Portugal were acquired for use in breeding Poitou donkeys. This preceded the creation of the Asinerie Nationale Experimentale, which opened in Charente-Maritime in Dampierre-sur-Boutonne in 1982, as an experimental breeding farm for Poitous. The Parc also works to preserve the Poitevin horse breed. In 1988, the Association pour la Sauvegarde du Baudet du Poitou (SABAUD) was formed as a breeder network that focuses on marketing and fundraising for the breed, and in 1989 became the financial support arm of the Asinerie Nationale Experimentale. The Association des Éleveurs des Races Équine, Mulassière et Asine, Baudet du Poitou is the registering body for the Poitou donkey.[2][6] The early conservation efforts were sometimes sidetracked as some breeders sold crossbred Poitous as purebreds, which are worth up to ten times as much. Forged pedigrees and registration papers were sometimes used to legitimize these sales. However, by the 1990s, DNA testing and microchip technology began to be used to identify and track purebred animals.[10]
The conservation efforts in the latter decades of the 20th century and the early years of the 21st were successful, and a 2005 survey revealed 450 purebred registered animals.[2] This number had dropped to just under 400 by 2011.[6] The French studbook for the breed is split into two sections. The first, Livre A, is for purebred animals with documented Poitou parentage on both sides of their pedigree. The second, Livre B, is for animals with one purebred Poitou parent.[3] The American Livestock Breeds Conservancy lists the Poitou as "Critical" on its Conservation Priority List, a category for breeds with less than 2,000 animals worldwide and less than 200 registrations annually in the US.[11]
In 2001, scientists in Australia successfully implanted a Poitou donkey embryo created by artificial insemination in the womb of a Standardbred mare. Worries that joint problems might prevent a healthy pregnancy in the foal's biological mother led to the initiative. The resultant foal became one of three Poitou donkeys in Australia. The procedure was unusual because it is often difficult for members of one Equus species to accept implanted embryos from another species in the same genus.[12]
In the United States
Historical records exist of several sets of exports of Poitous from France to the US during the 19th and early 20th centuries, including a 1910 import of 10 donkeys. Most of these were integrated into the generic pool of donkey bloodstock, rather than being bred pure.[7] During this time, Poitous were used in the creation of the American Mammoth Jack breed. Due to high purchase and transportation costs, the breed played a smaller role in the development of the Mammoth Jack than some breeders would have preferred.[13] Imports to the US continued until at least 1937, when a successful breeding jack name Kaki, who stood 16.2 hands (66 inches, 168 cm) high, was brought to the country. The 1940s through the 1960s saw a dearth of Poitou imports, and only a few arrived between 1978 and the 1990s. By 1996, there were estimated to only be around 30 Poitous in North America.[7]
In 1996, Debbie Hamilton, an American, founded the Hamilton Rare Breeds Foundation on a 440-acre (180 ha) farm in Hartland, Vermont, to breed Poitou donkeys. As of 2004, she owned 26 purebred and 14 partbred Poitous, making hers the largest Poitou breeding operation in the United States, and the second largest in the world, behind the French government-sponsored experimental farm. Hamilton works with French officials toward the preservation of the breed, and has received praise from French veterinarians, who appreciate her technical and financial contributions to the breed.[10] Techniques for using cryopreservation to develop a sperm bank for Poitou donkeys have been in development in France since at least 1997,[14] but Hamilton has pioneered the use of artificial insemination using frozen semen in the breed, in order to use genetic material from France to improve Poitou herds in the US.[10][15] The North American Baudet de Poitou Society, organized by the American Donkey and Mule Society, is the American registry for the breed, coordinating with French officials for inspections and registrations of American-bred Poitou stock.[7]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Poitou". Oklahoma State University. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
- ^ a b c d e "Poitou Ass". American Livestock Breeds Conservancy. Retrieved 5 February 2013.
- ^ a b c "Vivienne the Poitou donkey". Sedgwick County Zoo. 31 July 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
- ^ Règlement approuvé le 17 décembre 2013: Règlement du stud-book du Baudet du Poitou (in French). Haras Nationaux. Accessed July 2014.
- ^ "Poitou Donkey". Action Wildlife Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 5 February 2013.
- ^ a b c "Baudet de Poitou" (in French). Races mulassieres du Poitou. 2013. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f g Dohner, Janet Vorwald (2001). The Encyclopedia of Historic and Endangered Livestock and Poultry Breeds. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 391. ISBN 0-300-08880-9.
- ^ a b c Wallace, John Hankins, ed. (1883). "Mule Breeding in Poitou". Wallace's Monthly, Volume 9. Benjamin Singerly. pp. 128–130.
- ^ "Baudet de Poitou" (PDF) (in French). Les Haras Nationaux. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
- ^ a b c Boudette, Neal E. (6 August 2004). "Endangered Donkey Has a Shaggy Tale - With A Happy Ending". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
- ^ "Conservation Priority Equine List 2012" (PDF). American Livestock Breeds Conservancy. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
- ^ "Rare donkey's even rarer birth". BBC News. 8 February 2002. Retrieved 5 February 2013.
- ^ Patton, Leah. "American Mammoth Jackstock". North American Saddle Mule Association. Retrieved 5 February 2013.
- ^ Trimeche, A.; Renard, P.; Tainturier, D (1998). "A Procedure for Poitou Jackass Sperm Cryopreservation". Theriogenology. 50 (1): 793–806. doi:10.1016/S0093-691X(98)00184-8. PMID 10734453.
- ^ "Poitou Donkey". Hamilton Rare Breeds Association. Retrieved 5 February 2013.
External links
Media related to Baudet du Poitou at Wikimedia Commons