Gilman International Conservatory
     

Somali Wild Ass

Scientific Name: Equus africanus somaliensis

The wild ass is thought to be the origin species for the donkey, which was domesticated over 6000 years ago in North Africa, and the name derives from the latin word for the donkey asinus.  The Somali or African wild ass lives in small herds in the hot desert grasslands of the Horn of Africa.  One of the smallest of the true wild horses (equids) the Somali wild ass has striking grayish coat coloration with contrasting zebra-like fine, black stripes on their legs.

 

The Somali wild ass from the Horn of Africa is one of the rarest wild equids in the world with less than 2000 animals thought to exist in widely scattered herds.  Threats from competition with domestic farm animals for sparse desert grass and water resources have resulted in severe declines in numbers of African wild ass.  Few protective measures are in place for the wild population and the remaining animals are fragmented and dangerously dwindling.   

 

White Oak Conservation Center recently acquired a herd of Somali wild ass to participate with international efforts to help save this species from extinction.   Our contribution has included the importation of an important stallion from a zoo in Europe to breed with females born in the US, now at White Oak.  As one of three institutions in the US breeding this species, we plan to work closely with zoo partners in Conservation Centers for Species Survival to ensure a strong captive program is in place, as an insurance against the extinction of the wild population of Somali wild ass.  The Conservation Center is also supporting field conservation efforts for the species in Ethiopia including a PhD student who is monitoring wild populations in Ethiopia for his dissertation.   

somali somali somali

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