The 
donkey or 
ass, 
Equus africanus asinus,
[1][2] is a 
domesticated member of the 
Equidae or horse family. The wild ancestor of the donkey is the 
African Wild Ass, 
E. africanus. In the western 
United States, a small donkey is sometimes called a 
burro (from the 
Spanish word for the animal).
A male donkey or ass is called a 
jack, a female a 
jenny, and an offspring less than one year old a 
foal (male: 
colt, female: 
filly).
While different species of the 
Equidae family can interbreed, offspring are almost always sterile. Nonetheless, horse/donkey 
hybrids are popular for their durability and vigor. A 
mule is the offspring of a jack (male donkey) and a 
mare (female horse). The much rarer successful mating of a male horse and a female donkey produces a 
hinny.
Asses were first 
domesticated around 3000 BC,
[3] approximately the same time as the 
horse,  and have spread around the world. They continue to fill important roles  in many places today and domesticated species are increasing in  numbers, but the African wild ass and another relative, the 
Onager, are 
endangered. As "
beasts of burden" and companions, asses and donkeys have worked together with humans for millennia.
Breeding
Jennies are normally pregnant for about 12 months, though the gestation period varies from 11 to almost 14 months.
[4]  Jennies usually give birth to a single foal. Twins are very rare: only  about 1.7 percent of donkey pregnancies result in twins, and both twins  survive in only about 14 percent of cases.
[citation needed]
Characteristics
Domestic donkeys vary considerably in size, depending on breed and management. The height at the 
withers  ranges from 80 to 160 cm (31 to 63 in), and the weight from 80 to 480  kg (176 to 1,058 lb). Donkeys have a lifespan of 30 to 50 years.
[5]
Donkeys are adapted to marginal 
desert  lands, and have many traits that are unique to the species as a result.  Wild donkeys live separated from each other, unlike tight 
wild horse and 
feral horse  herds. Donkeys have developed very loud vocalizations, which help keep  in contact with other donkeys over the wide spaces of the desert. The  best-known call is referred to as a "bray," which can be heard for over  three kilometers. Donkeys have larger ears than horses. Their longer  ears may pick up more distant sounds,
[citation needed]  and may help cool the donkey's blood. Donkeys in the wild can defend  themselves with a powerful kick of their hind legs as well as by biting  and striking with their front hooves.
Communication
 
 
Satirical use of braying in a political cartoon
 
 
 
Braying is the characteristic sound made by an ass, donkey, and most  mules. Donkeys use this sound to communicate and will bray more  frequently when a new donkey is encountered. The sound typically lasts  for twenty seconds.
[6][7] The sound may be rendered 
onomatapoeically as "
eeyore" and so this was used as the name of the donkey in 
Winnie-the-Pooh. Donkeys may be trained to bray or not to bray upon command. This may be used as a form of 
mockery.
[8][9] Braying may be considered a 
simile for loud and foolish speech. For example,
[10]
There are braying men in the world as well as braying asses; for  what's loud and senseless talking and swearing, any other than braying
Nutrition
Donkeys' tough 
digestive system is somewhat less prone to 
colic  than that of horses, can break down near-inedible vegetation and  extract moisture from food very efficiently. As a rule, donkeys need  smaller amounts of 
feed than horses of comparable height and weight. Because they are 
easy keepers, if overfed, donkeys are also quite susceptible to 
laminitis.
Donkeys evolved to spend 14–16 hours per day browsing and foraging  for food. In their native arid and semi-arid climates this would often  be a poor quality, scrubby fiber. Domesticated donkey owners face the  challenge of feeding their donkey enough low energy fiber in order to  meet their appetite, but in temperate climates the forage available is  often too rich and abundant, resulting in weight gain and obesity with  further implications including 
laminitis, 
hyperlipidemia and 
gastric ulcers.
[11]  Although the donkey’s gastrointestinal tract has no marked differences  in structure to that of the horse, it is well documented that "donkeys  are more efficient at digesting food than horses and, as a consequence,  can thrive on less forage than a similar sized pony."
[12] Donkeys need to eat approximately 1.5 percent of their body weight per day in dry matter,
[13]  compared with 2-2.5 percent for horses. It is not fully understood why  donkeys are such efficient digestors but it is thought that they may  have a different microbial population in the large intestine than do  horses. Another possibility is increased gut retention time compared to  ponies.
[14]
Donkeys gain most of their daily energy needs from 
structural carbohydrates. An average, healthy donkey only requires free choice feeding of low-calorie fiber-rich 
forage such as 
straw (preferably barley straw), supplemented with controlled grazing in the summer and 
hay  in the winter. A donkey’s requirement for protein and fat are so low  that in practice once the energy requirements are met so too are the  protein and fat requirements.
[13] Cereal based feeds designed for horses are often too high in energy levels and will exceed the daily requirements of donkeys.
[11] Even a small amount of grazing or fresh 
fodder  during the spring and summer will provide adequate vitamin levels, so  for a normal, healthy donkey a diet of straw plus a little grazing or  hay meets their nutritional needs without need for concentrated feeds. A  low-calorie vitamin and mineral supplement is recommended for donkeys  year-round when on a restricted diet, and to all donkeys during the  winter months.
Etymology of the name
Until recently the 
synonym ass was the more common term for 
Equus asinus (as in 
jackass, meaning "male donkey"). The first written use of donkey is as recent as 1785.
[15] While the word 
ass has 
cognates in most other 
Indo-European languages, 
donkey is an 
etymologically obscure word for which no credible cognate has been identified. Hypotheses on its derivation include the following:
- Perhaps a diminutive of dun (dull grayish-brown), a typical donkey colour.[15][16]
- Perhaps from the name Duncan.[15][17]
- Perhaps of imitative origin.[17]
The 
homonymity in the United States with a vulgar term 
ass for "buttocks" might have influenced its gradual replacement by 
donkey there, though this does not account for the parallel change in Britain and Australia.
[citation needed]
Scientific name
Traditionally, the scientific name for the donkey is 
Equus asinus asinus based on the 
principle of priority used for scientific names of animals. However, the 
International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature  has ruled in 2003 that if the domestic species and the wild species are  considered subspecies of each other, the scientific name of the wild  species has priority, even when that subspecies has been described after  the domestic subspecies.
[2] This means that the proper scientific name for the donkey is 
Equus africanus asinus when it is considered a subspecies, and 
Equus asinus when it is considered a species.
History
 |  Donkey in an Egyptian painting c. 1298-1235 BC
 | 
The 
ancestors of the modern donkey are the 
Nubian and 
Somalian subspecies of 
African wild ass.
[18][19] The African Wild Ass was 
domesticated around 4000 BC. The donkey became an important 
pack animal for people living in the 
Egyptian and 
Nubian  regions as they can easily carry 20% to 30% of their own body weight  and can also be used as a farming and dairy animal. By 1800 BC, the ass  had reached the 
Middle East, where the trading city of 
Damascus was referred to as the "City of Asses" in 
cuneiform texts. 
Syria produced at least three breeds of donkeys, including a saddle breed with a graceful, easy gait. These were favored by women.
[citation needed]
For the 
Greeks, the donkey was associated with 
Dionysus, the god of wine. The 
Romans also valued the ass and would use it as a 
sacrificial animal
[citation needed]
Equines had become 
extinct in the 
Western Hemisphere at the end of the last 
Ice Age. However, horses and donkeys were brought back to the Americas by the 
Conquistadors. In 1495,
[citation needed]the ass first appeared in the 
New World when 
Christopher Columbus brought four jacks and two jennys. It is from this bloodline that many of the mules which the 
Conquistadors used while they explored the 
Americas were produced.
[citation needed] Shortly after the 
United States became independent, President 
George Washington  imported the first mammoth jack stock into the country. Because the  existing Jack donkeys in the New World at the time lacked the size and  strength he sought to produce quality work mules, he imported donkeys  from 
Spain and 
France, some standing over 1.63 m tall. One of the donkeys Washington received from the 
Marquis de Lafayette,  named "Knight of Malta", stood 1.43 m and thus was regarded as a great  disappointment. Viewing this donkey as unfit for producing mules,  Washington instead bred Knight of Malta to his jennys and, in doing so,  created an American line of Mammoth Jacks (a breed name that includes  both males and females).
Despite these early appearances of donkeys in America, the donkey did  not find widespread distribution in America until it was found useful  as a 
pack animal by 
miners, particularly the 
gold prospectors, of the mid-19th century. Miners preferred this animal due to its ability to carry tools, supplies, and 
ore.  Their sociable disposition and adaptation to human companionship  allowed many miners to lead their donkeys without ropes. They simply  followed behind their owner. As mining became less an occupation of the  individual prospector and more of an industrial underground operation,  the miners' donkeys lost their jobs, and many were simply turned loose  into the American deserts. Descendants of these donkeys, now 
feral, can still be seen roaming the Southwest today.
By the early 20th century, donkeys began to be used less as 
working animals  and instead kept as pets in the United States and other wealthier  nations, while remaining an important work animal in many poorer  regions. The increased popularity of the donkey as a pet in the USA was  seen in the appearance of the miniature donkey in 1929. Robert Green  imported miniature donkeys to the United States and was a lifetime  advocate of the breed and said of it, "Miniature donkeys possess the  affectionate nature of a Newfoundland, the resignation of a cow, the  durability of a 
mule, the courage of a tiger, and the intellectual capability only slightly inferior to man's."
Although the donkey faded from public notice and became viewed as a  comical, stubborn beast which was considered "cute" at best, the donkey  has recently regained some popularity in 
North America as a mount, for pulling wagons, and even as a guard animal. Some standard species are ideal for guarding herds of 
sheep against 
predators, since most donkeys have a natural wariness toward coyotes and other canines, and will keep them away from the herd.
Economic use
 
 
On 
the island of Hydra, because cars are outlawed, donkeys and mules form virtually the sole method of heavy goods transport.
 
 
 
 |  Classic British seaside donkeys in Skegness
 | 
The vast majority of donkeys are used for the same types of work that  they have been doing for 6000 years. Their most common role is for  transport, whether riding, pack transport, or pulling carts. They may  also be used for farm tillage, threshing, raising water, milling, and  other jobs. Other donkeys are used to sire mules, as companions for  horses, to guard 
sheep, and as pets. In the past, donkey skin was used in the production of 
parchment.
[20]
A few donkeys are milked or raised for meat;
[21]  in Italy, which has the highest consumption of equine meat in Europe  and where donkey meat is the main ingredient of several regional dishes,  only about 1000 donkeys were slaughtered in 2010, yielding  approximately 100 tonnes of meat.
[22] Asses' milk may command good prices: the average price in Italy in 2009 was €15 per litre,
[23]  and a price of €6 per 100 ml was reported from Croatia in 2008; it is  used for soaps and cosmetics as well as dietary purposes. The niche  markets for both milk and meat are expanding.
[20]
Donkeys have a notorious reputation for stubbornness, but this has  been attributed to a much stronger sense of "self preservation" than  exhibited by horses.
[24]  Likely based on a stronger prey instinct and a weaker connection with  man, it is considerably more difficult to force or frighten a donkey  into doing something it perceives to be dangerous for whatever reason.
Although formal studies of their 
behaviour and 
cognition  are rather limited, donkeys appear to be quite intelligent, cautious,  friendly, playful, and eager to learn. They are often pastured or  stabled with horses and ponies, and are thought to have a calming effect  on nervous horses. If a donkey is introduced to a 
mare and 
foal, the foal will often turn to the donkey for support after it has been weaned from its mother.
[25]
Once a person has earned their confidence they can be willing and companionable partners and very dependable in work
[citation needed]. For this reason, they are now commonly
[citation needed] kept as 
pets in countries where their use as beasts of burden has disappeared. 
Donkey rides for children are also a popular
[citation needed] pastime for children in holiday resorts or other leisure contexts.
Shoeing
 |  Farriers shoeing a donkey in Cyprus in 1900
 | 
Working donkeys may need to be shod. Donkey shoes are similar to 
horseshoes, but usually smaller and without toe-clips.
Donkeys in warfare
Donkeys have been used throughout history for transportation of  supplies, pulling wagons, and, in a few cases, as riding animals. During  
World War I a 
British stretcher bearer, 
John Simpson Kirkpatrick, serving with the 
Australian and New Zealand Army Corps, used a donkey named Duffy to rescue wounded soldiers, carrying them to safety in 
Gallipoli. There is a statue of John Simpson Kirkpatrick and his donkey in his home town, 
South Shields.
According to British food writer 
Matthew Fort, donkeys were, until recently, used in the 
Italian Army. The Mountain Fusiliers each had a donkey to 
carry their gear, and in extreme circumstances the animal could be 
eaten.
[26] In 2006, security forces in 
Afghanistan prevented a man from entering a town in 
Zabul Province with a donkey which he had laden with 30 
kg (66 
lbs.) of 
explosives and a number of 
landmines, which the man had planned to set off with a remote controlled 
detonator.
[27]
Present status
About 41 million donkeys were reported worldwide in 2006.
[20] China has the most with 11 million, followed by 
Pakistan, 
Ethiopia and 
Mexico. Some researchers believe the actual number is somewhat higher since many donkeys go uncounted.
[21] The number of breeds and percentage of world population for each of the FAO's world regions was in 2006:
[20]
 | Region | No. of breeds | % of world pop. | 
 | Africa | 26 | 26.9 | 
 | Asia & Pacific | 32 | 37.6 | 
 | Europe & the Caucasus | 51 | 3.7 | 
 | Latin America & the Carribean | 24 | 19.9 | 
 | Near & Middle East | 47 | 11.8 | 
 | North America | 5 | 0.1 | 
 | World | 185 | 41 million head | 
In 1997 the number of donkeys in the world was reported to be  continuing to grow, as it had steadily done throughout most of history;  factors cited as contributing to this were increasing human population,  progress in economic development and social stability in some poorer  nations, conversion of 
forests to farm and range land, rising prices of motor vehicles and fuel, and the popularity of donkeys as pets.
[21][28]  More recently, the world population of donkeys is reported to be  rapidly shrinking, falling from 43.7 million to 43.5 million between  1995 and 2000, and to only 41 million in 2006.
[20]
The Domestic Animal Diversity Information System (
DAD-IS) of the 
FAO listed 189 breeds of ass in June 2011.
[29] In 2000 the number of 
breeds of donkey  recorded worldwide was 97, and in 1995 it was 77. The rapid increase is  attributed to attention paid to identification and recognition of  donkey breeds by the FAO's Animal Genetic Resources project.
[20].
In prosperous countries, the welfare of donkeys both at home and  abroad has recently become a concern, and a number of sanctuaries for  retired and rescued donkeys have been set up. The largest is the Donkey  Sanctuary of England, which also supports donkey welfare projects in  Egypt, Ethiopia, 
India, 
Kenya, and Mexico.
[30]
Feral donkeys and wild asses
In some areas domestic donkeys have returned to the wild and established 
feral populations, such as the 
Burro of North America and the 
Asinara donkey of 
Sardinia,  Italy, both of which have protected status. Feral donkeys can also  cause problems, notably in environments that have been evolutionarily  free of any form of 
equid, such as Hawaii.
[31]
Wild asses, onagers, and kiangs
With domestication of almost all donkeys few species now exist in the wild. They include the 
African Wild Ass, 
Equus africanus, and its critically endangered subspecies the 
Somali Wild Ass, 
Equus africanus somaliensis, and 
Nubian Wild Ass, 
Equus africanus africanus, the principal ancestor of the domestic donkey.
[20] Extinct species include the 
European Ass, 
Equus hydruntinus, which became extinct during the 
Neolithic, and the 
North African Wild Ass, 
Equus africanus atlanticus, which became extinct in 
Roman times.
[20]
There are also five subspecies of Asiatic Wild Ass or 
Onager, 
Equus hemionus, and three subspecies of the 
kiang, 
Equus kiang, of the Himalayan upland.
In the wild asses can reach top speeds equalling 
zebras and even most 
horses.
Donkey hybrids
A male donkey (jack) can be crossed with a female horse to produce a 
mule. A male horse can be crossed with a female donkey (jennet or jenny) to produce a 
hinny. A female donkey in the UK is called a 
mare, or 
jenny.
Horse-donkey 
hybrids are almost always 
sterile because horses have 64 
chromosomes  whereas donkeys have 62, producing offspring with 63 chromosomes. Mules  are much more common than hinnies. This is believed to be caused by two  factors, the first being proven in cat hybrids, that when the  chromosome count of the male is the higher, fertility rates drop (as in  the case of stallion x jennet).
[citation needed]  The lower progesterone production of the jenny may also lead to early  embryonic loss. In addition, there are reasons not directly related to  reproductive biology. Due to different 
mating  behavior, jacks are often more willing to cover mares than stallions  are to breed jennys. Further, mares are usually larger than jennys and  thus have more room for the ensuing foal to grow in the womb, resulting  in a larger animal at birth. It is commonly believed that mules are more  easily handled and also physically stronger than hinnies, making them  more desirable for breeders to produce, and it is unquestioned that  mules are more common in total number
[citation needed].
The offspring of a 
zebra-donkey cross is called a zonkey, 
zebroid, zebrass, or zedonk;
[32] zebra mule  is an older term, but still used in some regions today. The foregoing  terms generally refer to hybrids produced by breeding a male zebra to a  female donkey. 
Zebra hinny, zebret and 
zebrinny all refer  to the cross of a female zebra with a male donkey. Zebrinnies are rarer  than zedonkies because female zebras in captivity are most valuable when  used to produce full-blooded zebras.
[33]  There are not enough female zebras breeding in captivity to spare them  for hybridizing; there is no such limitation on the number of female  donkeys breeding.
Cultural references
 |  | This "In popular culture" section may contain minor or trivial references. Please reorganize this content to explain the subject's impact on popular culture rather than simply listing appearances, and remove trivial references. (September 2010) | 
The long history of human donkey use has created a rich store of cultural references:
- Buridan's ass is an illustration of a paradox in philosophy in the conception of free will.
Religion and myth
- There are 68 references to a donkey ("hamor" or "chamor" חמור) in the Old Testament, starting with a gift of some to Abraham by the Pharaoh in Genesis 12:16. A donkey features in the binding of Isaac (Genesis 22:3). Donkeys are again mentioned as a measure of wealth in the story of Jacob's life in Genesis 30:43.
- In Genesis the King of Shechem (the modern Nablus), killed by Jacob's  sons, is called "Hamor" - showing that at the time this animal was held  in high enough esteem that it was no disrespect for royalty to use its  name as their first name. (See Dinah, Shechem, Animal names as first names in Hebrew.)
- In Numbers 22:22-41 "The Lord opened the mouth of the donkey" (vs. 28) and it speaks to Balaam. In Judges 15:13-17 where the hero Samson slays Philistines with the jawbone of an ass. Additional references can be found in Deuteronomy 22:10, Job 11:12, Proverbs 26:3 and elsewhere.
- In Jewish Oral Tradition, the son of David was prophesied as riding on a donkey if the tribes of Israel are undeserving of redemption.[34] As noted, in the context of the Torah this connoted wealth and affluence befitting the House of David, as at the time commoners are described as simply going on foot.
- The donkey mostly appears reflecting the natural environment and as  an aspect of an agricultural economy. The Bible often specifies whether a  person rode donkeys, since this was used to indicate a person’s wealth  in much the same way luxury cars do today. (Horses at that time were used solely for war, powerful kings such as Solomon being the only ones who could afford to import them from Egypt.)
- In contemporary Israel,  the term "Messiah's Donkey" (Chamoro Shel Mashiach חמורו של משיח)  stands at the center of a controversial religious-political doctrine,  attributed to Rabbi Avraham Yitchak Hacohen Cook, under which it was the Heavenly-imposed "task" of secular Zionists to build up a Jewish State, but once the state is established they are fated to give place to the Religious  who are ordained to lead the state. The secularists in this analogy are  "The Donkey" while the religious who are fated to supplant them are a  collective "Messiach". A book on the subject, published in 1998 by the  militant secularist Sefi Rechlevsky, aroused a major controversy in the  Israeli public opinion.[35]
- Greek mythology includes the story of King Midas who judged against Apollo in favor of Pan during a musical contest, and had his ears changed to those of a donkey as punishment.
- The ass was a symbol of the Greek god Dionysus, particularly in relationship to his companion, Silenus.
- The most common Greek word for ass appears roughly 100 times in the Biblical text. In the Gospels, Jesus rides a donkey into Jerusalem (Mark 11:1 in which colt refers to a donkey colt).
- Traditionally, Mary is portrayed as riding a donkey while pregnant. Legend has it that the cross on the donkey’s shoulders comes from the shadow of Christ’s crucifixion,  placing the donkey at the foot of the cross. It was once believed that  hair cut from this cross and hung from a child’s neck in a bag would  prevent fits and convulsions. However, in later times when the  aristocracy used horses,  depicting the Jesus as riding a donkey came to have an opposite  connotation, as indicating a simple, sober way of life and avoiding  luxury. The same connotation is evident in the description of saints such as Francis of Assisi as riding donkeys.
- Muhammad, the prophet of Islam said that dogs and donkeys, if they pass in front of men in prayer, will void or nullify that prayer.[36] He also said that "when you hear the braying of donkeys, seek Refuge with Allah from Satan for (their braying indicates) that they have seen a devil."[37]
- Several were buried in Hor-Aha's tomb
Fable and folklore
- European folklore claims that the tail of a donkey can be used to combat whooping cough or scorpion stings.
- In Panchatantra which is a collection of animal fables, where are two stories of donkey 1) The Lion and The Foolish Donkey and 2)The Singing Donkey
- In Hitopadesha there is a story of Donkey named The Donkey and the Dog
- One of Aesop's fables has an ass dressed in a lion skin who gives himself away by braying.
- La Fontaine's  fable about the donkey of a miser who made the donkey work hard and eat  less, coming to one day when thieves came and the donkey told his  master to run for his life; however, the donkey didn't care about  escaping, because one way or another he would continue working hard.