Quagga
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Quagga
The quagga is an extinct subspecies of the plains zebra,[1] which was once found in great numbers in South Africa's Cape Province and the southern part of the Orange Free State. It was distinguished from other zebras by having the usual vivid marks on the front part of the body only. In the mid-section, the stripes faded and the dark, inter-stripe spaces became wider, and the rear parts were a plain brown. The name comes from a Khoikhoi word for zebra and is onomatopoeic, being said to resemble the quagga's call. The only quagga to ever have been photographed alive was the Regent's Park Zoo mare in London.
TaxonomyThe quagga was originally classified as an individual species, Equus quagga, in 1788. Over the next fifty years or so, many other zebras were described by naturalists and explorers. Because of the great variation in coat patterns (no two zebras are alike), taxonomists were left with a great number of described "species", and no easy way to tell which of these were true species, which were subspecies, and which were simply natural variants.Long before this confusion was sorted out, the quagga had been hunted to extinction for meat, hides, and to preserve feed for domesticated stock. The last wild quagga was probably shot in the late 1870s, and the last specimen in captivity, a mare, died on August 12, 1883 at the Artis Magistra zoo in Amsterdam. Because of the great confusion between different zebra species, particularly among the general public, the quagga had become extinct before it was realized that it appeared to be a separate species.
1793 illustration of the quagga stallion of Louis XVI's menagerie at Versailles.
Quagga specimen at Natural History Museum, London. Quagga hybrids and similar animals
Quagga specimen with zebra-horse hybrid foal at Walter Rothschild Zoological Museum, Tring, England. There is a record of a quagga bred to a horse in the 1896 work Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine by George M. Gould and Walter L. Pyle:
In his 1859 The Origin of Species, Charles Darwin recalls seeing coloured drawings of zebra-donkey hybrids, and mentions "Lord Moreton's famous hybrid from a chesnut [sic] mare and male quagga..." Darwin mentioned this particular hybrid again in 1868 in The Variation Of Animals And Plants Under Domestication,[4] and provides a citation to the journal in which Lord Morton first described the breeding. Okapi markings are nearly the reverse of the quagga, with the forequarters being mostly plain and the hindquarters being heavily striped. However, the okapi is no relation of the quagga, horse, donkey, or zebra. Its closest taxonomic relative is the giraffe. In popular cultureA quagga appears in a sequence in the Soviet Union's animated The Cat Who Walked by Herself, in which Dog tracks the hoofprints of one, and Cat tells the boy of the Red Book of endangered species, and how Quagga had "her track severed" (that is, made extinct) due to Man's selfish actions. A Quagga is one of the main characters in The Katurran Odyssey, a fantasy children's book by David Michael Wieger. Also the Quagga has had a part in the book Artemis Fowel the Time Paradox, by author Eoin Colfer See alsoReferences
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