,
Tring,
England In 1815, Lord Morton mated a quagga stallion to a chestnut
Arabian mare. The result was a female hybrid which resembled both parents. This provoked the interest of Cossar Ewart, Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh (1882-1927) and a keen geneticist. Ewart crossed a zebra stallion with pony mares to investigate the theory of
telegony, or paternal impression. In
The Origin of Species (1859),
Charles Darwin mentioned four colored drawings of hybrids between the ass and zebra. He also wrote In Lord Morton's famous hybrid from a chestnut mare and male quagga, the hybrid, and even the pure offspring subsequently produced from the mare by a black Arabian sire, were much more plainly barred across the legs than is even the pure quagga. In his book
The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication, Darwin described a hybrid ass-zebra specimen in the British Museum as being dappled on its flanks. He also mentioned a "triple hybrid, from a bay mare, by a hybrid from a male ass and female zebra" displayed at
London Zoo. This would have required the zebroid sire to be fertile. During the South African War, the
Boers crossed
Chapman's zebras with ponies to produce animals for transport work, chiefly for hauling guns. A specimen was captured by British forces, presented to
King Edward VII by
Lord Kitchener and photographed by W. S. Berridge. Zebras are resistant to
sleeping sickness, whereas purebred horses and ponies are not, and zebra mules hopefully would inherit this resistance.
Grévy's zebra has been crossed with the
Somali wild ass in the early 20th century. Zorses were bred by the U.S. government and reported in
Genetics in Relation to Agriculture by E. B. Babcock and R. E. Clausen (early 20th century), in an attempt to investigate inheritance and telegony. The experiments were also reported in
The Science of Life by H. G. Wells, J. Huxley and G. P. Wells (around 1929). Interest in zebra crosses continued in the 1970s. In 1973, a cross between a zebra and a donkey was foaled at the Jerusalem Zoo. They called it a "hamzab". In the 1970s, the
Colchester Zoo bred zedonks, at first by accident and later to create a disease-resistant riding and draft animal. The experiment was discontinued when zoos became more conservation-minded. A number of hybrids were kept at the zoo after this; the last one died in 2009. As of 2010, one adult still remained at the tourist attraction of
Groombridge Place near Tunbridge Wells in Kent.
21st century Today, various zebroids are bred as riding and draft animals and as curiosities in circuses and smaller zoos. A zorse (more accurately a zony) was born at Eden Ostrich World,
Cumbria, in 2001, after a zebra was left in a field with a
Shetland pony. It was referred to as a Zetland. Usually, a zebra stallion is paired with a horse mare or donkey jenny, but in 2005, a
Burchell's zebra mare named Allison produced a zonkey called Alex, sired by a donkey jack at Highland Plantation in the parish of
Saint Thomas, Barbados. Alex, born 21 April 2005, is apparently the first zonkey in Barbados. In 2007, a horse stallion, Ulysses, and a zebra mare, Eclipse, produced a hebra named Eclyse, displaying an unusually patchy color coating. In July 2010, a zonkey was born at the Chestatee Wildlife Preserve in Dahlonega, Georgia. Another zebra–donkey hybrid, like the Barbados zonkey sired by a donkey, was born 3 July 2011 in Haicang Safari Park,
Haicang,
Xiamen. A zonkey, Ippo, was born 21 July 2013 in an animal reserve in
Florence. Khumba, the offspring of a zebra mare and a
dwarf albino donkey jack, was born on 21 April 2014 in the zoo of
Reynosa in the state of
Tamaulipas, Mexico. More recently, in November 2018 at a farm in Somerset, a cross between a donkey jack and a zebra mare was born. The male foal was described as a zonkey by its owner and has been named Zippy. ==See also==