Hustai National Park in Mongolia is home to a very special and rare breed, the Przewalski"s horse. Regarded by some as the only truly pure wild horse today, it is easily recognized by its pale yellowish-brown coat, a short, stiff mane, and short legs. The Przewalski"s horse, also called the "takhi" in Mongolia, was once extinct in the wild but has been successfully reintroduced through conservation efforts in the 1990s. An interesting fact about these horses is that they have 66 chromosomes, compared with 64 in domestic horses. Remarkably, Przewalski"s horses can mate with domestic horses to produce hybrids. These hybrids have 65 chromosomes and can breed and have their own offspring.
Przewalskis horses, Hustai National Park, Mongolia
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Red deer stag in Glen Affric, Scottish Highlands
-
Here comes summer
-
World Bee Day
-
Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness, New Mexico
-
Christmas Eve
-
Big wheels on a big mountain
-
Big Bend National Park in Texas turns 81
-
South Stack Lighthouse, Holy Island, Wales
-
Great wildebeest migration at Mara River, Kenya
-
Mossy Grotto Falls, Oregon
-
Monarch butterflies migrate south
-
Old man s whiskers growing wild
-
Winter scenery near Kuhmo, Finland
-
Observing a squirrelly day
-
Illuminated Uluru
-
Corjuem Fort in Goa, India
-
There’s a dog in there somewhere
-
Diamond Beach, Iceland
-
Cecil Brewer Staircase, London
-
Join the parade for World Elephant Day
-
Birds of a feather flocking together
-
Seventeen arches at sunset
-
Let the games begin
-
30 years after Exxon Valdez
-
A Latino art exhibition in Denver
-
Khao Sok National Park in Thailand
-
Rock House in Hocking Hills State Park, Ohio
-
Kendwa village, Zanzibar, Tanzania
-
National Llama Day
-
A desert arts pop-up, just popped up
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

