Everything about Hinny totally explained
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The word "hinny" is also a term of endearment used in North East England, equivalent to "honey"; see Geordie.
A
hinny is the offspring of a male
horse and a female
donkey (
jennet or jenny).
Hinnies compared with mules
Hinnies are rarer than
mules, which are the offspring of a male donkey and a female horse. The hinny is
sterile with only one recorded exception.
Similarities
Hinnies are similar to
mules in that they're generally more intelligent than horses, and more cooperative than donkeys. Both are also healthier and less expensive to feed and maintain than horses. This is a trait these
hybrids get from their donkey heritage. The donkey is a notoriously hardy creature that, in the wild, survives on a harsh diet in a
desert environment.
Differences
Hinnies are on average slightly smaller than
mules. There is much speculation as to the size variances among the two types of hybrids. Some fanciers feel this size difference is merely
physiological, due to the smaller size of the
donkey dam, as compared with a much larger
mare. Others claim it's genetic, but the view of the
American Donkey and Mule Society is, "The genetic inheritance of the hinny is exactly the same as the mule."
Thus hinnies are smaller because donkeys are, for the most part, smaller than horses, and the growth potential of equine offspring is influenced by the size of the dam's womb. Hinnies do however, like mules, come in many sizes. This is because donkeys come in many sizes, from miniatures as small as 24 inches (610 mm) at the
withers, to Mammoth donkey jacks and jennies that may be over 15 hands, approximately 60 inches (1524 mm) at the withers. Thus, a hinny is restricted to being about the size of the largest breed of donkey. Mules, however, have horse females as mothers, so they can be as large as the size of the largest breed of horse. There are some huge mules, mostly from work horse breeds such as the
Belgian.
Other than size, there are some minor differences that occur frequently between mules and hinnies. The head of a hinny resembles that of a horse, more so than mule heads do. Hinnies often have shorter ears, although they're still longer than those of horses, and more horse-like manes and tails than mules do. Hinnies coats are usually one of the horse colors, as the male parent most often determines the color of the coat. (Mules on the other hand usually have donkey coat colors.) Certain traits, like the popular
gait that some horses and donkeys possess, seem to pass more readily though the male parent. Therefore, many people have tried to produce gaited hybrids by using gaited male horses with female donkeys, in hopes of creating gaited hinnies.
Fertility, sterility, and rarity
Hinnies are difficult to obtain because of the differences in the number of
chromosomes of the horse and the
donkey. A donkey has 62 chromosomes, whereas a horse has 64. Hinnies, being hybrids of those two
species, have 63 chromosomes and are
sterile. The uneven number of chromosomes results in an incomplete
reproductive system. According to the ADMS,
"The equine hybrid is easier to obtain when the lower chromosome count, the donkey, is in the male. Therefore breeding for hinnies is more hit-and-miss than breeding for mules."(External Link
)
Male hinnies and
mules are usually castrated to help control their behavior by eliminating their interest in females. The male hinny or mule can and will mate, but the emission isn't
fertile. There are no recorded cases of fertile male hinnies or male mules.
Female hinnies and mules are not customarily spayed, and may or may not go through
estrus. Female mules have been known to produce offspring when mated to a purebred horse or donkey, though this is extremely uncommon. Since 1527 there have been more than sixty documented cases of foals born to female mules around the world. In contrast, according to the ADMS, there's only one known case of a female hinny doing so, and she produced a mix which has, thus far, only been documented once among the offspring of female mules:
- Mule mares pass along 100% of their maternal genes to their offspring, rather than a mix. Since a mule's mother is a horse, as a rule mule mares pass genes which are 100% horse to their foals. Thus, a mule mare bred to a horse stallion will produce a foal which is 100% horse, with no donkey genes at all.
In China in 1981, a hinny mare proved fertile with a donkey stallion. Scientists expected a 100% donkey foal if the female hinny had passed on her maternal chromosomes the same way as female mules do. However, when the Chinese hinny was bred to a donkey jack, she produced "Dragon Foal," who resembled a donkey with mule-like features. Dragon Foal's chromosomes and DNA tests confirmed that she was a previously undocumented combination- That is, she was not the expected gene combination of 'donkey-donkey' (from her donkey father) / 'donkey-donkey' (If her hinny mother were to have passed on her maternal donkey genes). Instead, Dragon Foal's gene pair combination was donkey-donkey/donkey-horse. Her hinny mother passed along a combination of maternal and paternal genes.
In Morocco in 2003, a mule mare bred to a donkey stallion produced a male foal that was 75% donkey and 25% horse, rather than the expected 50%/50% if the mule mare had passed on her maternal chromosones, which are 100% horse, in the usual way. DNA testing revealed the Moroccan foal is a mixed karyotype hybrid like the Chinese hinny offspring, Dragon Foal. This means that, unlike regular hinnies, whose 63 chromosomes consist of 31 pairs that are horse-donkey with one left over, the Morocco colt has about 23 pairs of chromosomes that are donkey-donkey, eight pairs that are horse-donkey, and one left over.
Because of the mix of gene pairs in the Moroccan foal, it's unknown whether Dragon Foal's genetic oddity is due to her mother being a hinny rather than a mule, or if there's some other factor that applies equally to Dragon Foal in China and the 2003 colt in Morocco.
There are other reasons for the rarity of hinnies. Female donkeys, jennies, and male horses, stallions, are choosier about their mates than horse mares and donkey jacks. Thus, the two parties involved may not care to mate. Even if they do cooperate, female donkeys are less likely to conceive when bred to a horse than horse mares are when bred to a donkey. Breeding large hinnies is an even bigger challenge, as it requires a jenny of Mammoth donkey stock. Mammoth donkey stock is becoming increasingly rare and has been declared an endangered domestic breed. Fanciers are unlikely to devote a Mammoth jenny's valuable breeding time to producing sterile hinny hybrids when Mammoth females are in high demand to produce fertile pure-bred Mammoth foals.
Further Information
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