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OAReproduction against Extinction
The Value and Labours of Two Przewalski’s Mares
- Amsterdam University Press
- Source: Yearbook of Women’s History / Jaarboek voor Vrouwengeschiedenis, Volume 42, Issue 2024: Gender and Animals in History, Dec 2024, p. 257 - 273
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- 01 Dec 2024
Abstract
This chapter unearths the biographies of two Przewalski’s mares, who were traded, bred, and exhibited as zoo animals, who were coerced into mating and had their female choice curtailed. Yet, these two mares played a crucial role in preventing the extinction of their species. The first mare, Lucka, born during the Second World War at Prague Zoo, became known for her prolific reproduction despite being an atypical descendant of a hybrid, part of what some called a ‘contaminated’ breeding line. The second mare, Orlica 3, was the last wild horse captured in the Dzungarian Gobi after the war. Her introduction to the captive population signified an infusion of wildness and genetic diversity into generations of captive-bred horses. Their human–animal histories shed light on how human values directed selective breeding, shaping reproductive lives, and animal’s bodies, ultimately shaping what many humans consider to be the last wild horse species on the planet.