, at the Zoological Museum in Copenhagen The horse family
Equidae evolved in North America, with the genus
Equus appearing on the continent during the
Pliocene (5.3-2.6 million years ago). Horses are thought to have diverged from the ancestors of
zebras and
asses around 4 million years ago. Around 900–800,000 years ago, at the Early-
Middle Pleistocene boundary, the ancestors of Eurasian wild horses crossed over the
Bering Land Bridge from North America. Early horses in Eurasia are referred to species like
Equus mosbachensis. Currently, three subspecies that lived during recorded human history are recognized. Genetically, the pre-domestication horse,
E. ferus, and the domesticated horse,
E. caballus, form a single homogeneous group (
clade) and are genetically indistinguishable from each other. The genetic variation within this clade shows only a limited regional variation, with the notable exception of Przewalski's horse. unique
Y-chromosome gene
haplotypes, and unique
mtDNA haplotypes. A study in 2011 of DNA from bones of pre-domestication horses found that all were either
bay,
black or
leopard-spotted.
Scientific naming of the species In some sources including MSW 3 (2005), the domesticated and wild horses were considered a single species, with the valid scientific name for such a single horse species being
Equus ferus, although MSW erroneously used
E. caballus for this (enlarged) taxon on account of a mis-interpretation of the then-recent ICZN ruling on the matter, refer Groves & Grubb, 2011. The wild tarpan subspecies is
E. f. ferus, Przewalski's horse is
E. f. przewalskii, while the domesticated horse is nowadays normally (but not exclusively) treated as a separate species
E. caballus. The rules for the scientific naming of animal species are determined in the
International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, which stipulates that the oldest available valid scientific name is used to name the species. Previously, when taxonomists considered domesticated and wild horse two subspecies of the same species, the valid scientific name was
Equus caballus Linnaeus 1758, with the subspecies labeled
E. c. caballus (domesticated horse),
E. c. ferus Boddaert, 1785 (tarpan) and
E. c. przewalskii Poliakov, 1881 (Przewalski's horse). However, in 2003, the
International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature decided that the scientific names of the wild species have priority over the scientific names of domesticated species, therefore mandating the use of
Equus ferus for both the wild and the domesticated horse if the two taxa are considered conspecific.
Przewalski's horse Przewalski's horse occupied the eastern
Eurasian Steppes, perhaps from the
Ural Mountains to
Mongolia, although the ancient border between tarpan and Przewalski's distributions has not been clearly defined. Przewalski's horse was limited to
Dzungaria and western
Mongolia in the same period, and became
extinct in the wild during the 1960s, but was reintroduced in the late 1980s to two preserves in
Mongolia. Although earlier researchers such as
Marija Gimbutas theorized that the horses of the
Chalcolithic period were Przewalski's, a 2003 study indicated that the Przewalski's horse is not an ancestor to modern domesticated horses. In 2018, a DNA study revealed that the horses raised for meat and milk by the
Botai culture 5500 years ago were Przewalski's horses. The paper claims specifically that modern Przewalski's horses are the feral descendents of the domesticated Botai horse, although it is also possible both groups could have descended separately from the same ancient wild Przewalski's horses. Przewalski's horse is still found today, though it is an
endangered species and for a time was considered extinct in the wild. Roughly 2000 Przewalski's horses are in
zoos around the world. A small breeding population has been reintroduced in Mongolia. As of 2005, a cooperative venture between the
Zoological Society of London and Mongolian scientists has resulted in a population of 248 animals in the wild. Przewalski's horse has some biological differences from the domestic
horse; unlike
domesticated horses and the tarpan, which both have 64
chromosomes, Przewalski's horse has 66 chromosomes due to a
Robertsonian translocation. However, the offspring of Przewalski and domestic horses are fertile, possessing 65 chromosomes. ==Feral horses==