🐎 Wild horses return to the Kazakh steppes after 200 years

🐎 Wild horses return to the Kazakh steppes after 200 years

The world's last wild horses, Przewalski's horses, have returned to their original home in Kazakhstan. The horses come from zoos in Berlin and Prague. The plan is to transport a total of 40 horses to central Kazakhstan over the next five years.

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  • The world's last wild horses, Przewalski's horses, have returned to their original home in Kazakhstan.
  • The horses come from zoos in Berlin and Prague.
  • The plan is to transport a total of 40 horses to central Kazakhstan over the next five years.

Przewalski's horses back in their original habitat

Przewalski's horses, the world's only remaining wild horse species, once roamed freely over the vast steppe grasslands of Central Asia, writes the Guardian. It is in these areas that horses are believed to have been domesticated about 5,500 years ago. In northern Kazakhstan, people rode and milked horses almost 2,000 years before the first documented domestications in Europe. Human activity, including hunting and road construction that fragmented their population, drove the horses close to extinction in the 1960s.

Now they have returned. After an absence of about 200 years, a group of the world's last wild horses are back in their original home in Kazakhstan. Seven Przewalski's horses, four mares from Berlin and a stallion and two other mares from Prague, were flown to the Central Asian country on a Czech transport plane. Originally, eight horses were scheduled to travel, but one horse became dizzy and returned to Prague Zoo before the flight.

Reintroduced from zoos

The plan is to transport a total of 40 horses to central Kazakhstan over the next five years.

The horses reintroduced to Kazakhstan are descended from two groups that survived in zoos in Munich and Prague. Prague Zoo has previously been involved in reintroducing wild horses, then to Mongolia. Nine flights were carried out in that project and today there are about 1,500 wild horses in Mongolia.

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