The onager (, ) ( Equus hemionus), also known as hemione or Asiatic wild ass, is a species of the family Equidae native to Asia. A member of the subgenus Asinus, the onager was described and given its binomial name by German zoologist Peter Simon Pallas in 1775. Six subspecies are accepted.
The onager is reddish-brown or yellowish-brown and has a broad dorsal stripe on the middle of the back. It weighs about and reaches about head-body length. It is among the fastest mammals, capable of running .
The onager had a wider range from southwest and central to northern Asia including the Levant region, Arabian Peninsula, Afghanistan and Siberia; the prehistoric European wild ass subspecies ranged through Europe until the Bronze Age. During the early 20th century, it lost most of its range in the Middle East and Eastern Asia and lives today in Iran, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, India, Mongolia and China. It inhabits deserts and arid regions, , , , and . Like many other large grazing animals, its range has contracted greatly under the pressures of poaching and habitat loss. It has been classified as Near Threatened on the IUCN Red List in 2015. One subspecies is extinct, two are endangered, and two are near threatened; its status in China is not well known.
The species was commonly known as Asian wild ass, in which case the term onager was reserved for the subspecies E. h. onager, more specifically known as the Persian onager. More recently, the species share the same name, onager.
The Asiatic wild ass, among Old World equids, existed for more than 4 million years. The oldest divergence of Equus was the onager, followed by the zebras and onwards. A new species called the kiang ( E.kiang), a relative, was previously considered to be a subspecies of the onager as E.hemionus kiang, but recent molecular studies indicate it to be a distinct species, having diverged from the closest relative of the Mongolian wild ass's ancestor less than 500,000 years ago.
Pallas, 1775 | Northern China, eastern Kazakhstan, Mongolia, and Siberia | ||||
Groves and Mazák, 1967 | One of the largest subspecies of onager. It is long, tall at the withers, and weighs . Male onagers are larger than the females. | Northeastern Iran, Northern Afghanistan, western China, Kazakhstan, southern Siberia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Northern Mongolia, and Uzbekistan | |||
Boddaert, 1785 | Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan. | ||||
Lesson, 1827 | Southern Afghanistan, India, southeast Iran and Pakistan | ||||
Geoffroy, 1855 | Smallest subspecies, also the smallest form of Equidae | Western Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Turkey | |||
Regalia, 1907 | Formerly thought to be a distinct species, shown to be a subspecies of the onager by genetic studies in 2017. | Europe, Western Asia | |||
A seventh possible subspecies, the Gobi khulan ( E. h. luteus, also called the chigetai
Debates over the taxonomic identity of the onager occurred until 1980. , four living subspecies and two extinct subspecies of the Asiatic wild ass have been accepted. The Persian onager was formerly known as Equus onager, as it was thought to be a distinct species.
Molecular phylogenies indicate the most recent common ancestor of all modern equids (members of the genus Equus) lived around 5.6 (3.9–7.8) million years ago (Mya). Direct paleogenomic sequencing of a 700,000-year-old middle Pleistocene horse metapodial bone from Canada implies a more recent 4.07 Mya for the most recent common ancestor within the range of 4.0 to 4.5 Mya. The oldest divergencies are the Asian hemiones (subgenus E. (Asinus), including the Turkmenian kulan, onager, and kiang), followed by the African zebras (subgenera E. (Dolichohippus), and E. (Hippotigris)). All other modern forms including the domesticated horse (and many fossil Pliocene and Pleistocene forms) belong to the subgenus E. (Equus) which diverged about 4.8 (3.2–6.5) Mya.
During the late Pleistocene era around 40,000 years ago, the Asiatic wild ass ranged widely across Europe and in southwestern to northeastern Asia. It is also known from Middle Pleistocene fossils from the Nefud Desert of Saudi Arabia. The onager is local extinction in Israel, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, and southern regions of Siberia.
The Mongolian wild ass lives in deserts, mountains, and grasslands of Mongolia and region of northern China. A few live in northern Xinjiang region of northwestern China, most of which live mainly in Kalamaili Nature Reserve. It is the most common subspecies, but its populations have drastically decreased to a few thousand due to years of poaching and habitat loss in East Asia. The Gobi Desert is the onager's main stronghold. It is regionally extinct in eastern Kazakhstan, southern Siberia, and the region of China.
The Indian wild ass was once found throughout the arid parts and desert steppes of northwest India and Pakistan; about 4,500 remain, found in a few very hot wildlife sanctuaries in Gujarat. The Persian onager is found in two subpopulations in southern and northern Iran. The larger population is found at Khar Turan National Park. However, it is extinct in Afghanistan. The Turkmenian kulan used to be widespread in central to north Asia; it is now found in Turkmenistan, and has been reintroduced in southern Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.
The social behaviour of the Asian wild ass can vary widely, depending on different habitats and ranges, and on threats by predators including humans. In Mongolia and Central Asia ( E. h. hemionus and E. h. kulan), an onager stallion can adopt harem-type social groups, with several mares and foals in large home areas in the southwest, or in territory-based social groups in the south and southeast. Also, annual large hikes occur, covering to , where hiking in summer is more limited than in the winter. Onagers also occasionally form large group associations of 450 to 1,200 individuals, but this usually only occurs in places with food or water sources. As these larger groups dissolve again within a day, no overarching hierarchy apart from the ranking of the individual herds seems to exist. Young male onagers also frequently form "bachelor groups" during the winter.
Southern populations of onagers in the Middle East and South Asia tend to have a purely territorial life, where areas partly overlap. Dominant stallions have home ranges of , but they can also be significantly larger. These territories include food and rest stops and permanent or periodic water sources. Mares with foals sometimes find themselves in small groups, in areas up to , which overlap with those of the other groups and dominant stallions. Such features are also seen among Grévy's zebras ( E. grevyi) and the African wild asses.
Breeding is seasonal, and the gestation period of onagers is 11 months; the birth lasts a little more than 10 minutes. Mating and births occur from April to September, with an accumulation from June to July. The mating season in India is in the rainy season. The foal can stand and starts to nurse within 15 to 20 minutes. Females with young tend to form groups of up to five females. During rearing, a foal and dam remain close, but other animals and her own older offspring are displaced by the dam. Occasionally, stallions in territorial wild populations expel the young to mate with the mare again. Wild Asian wild asses reach an age of 14 years, but in captivity, they can live up to 26 years.
Habitat loss and fragmentation are also major threats to the onager, a particular concern in Mongolia as a result of the increasingly dense network of roads, railway lines, and fences required to support mining activities.
The Asiatic wild ass is also vulnerable to . A disease known as the African horse sickness caused a major decline to the Indian wild ass population in the 1960s. However, the subspecies is no longer under threat to such disease and is continuously increasing in number.
Two onager subspecies, the Persian onager and the Turkmenian kulan are being reintroduced to their former ranges, including in other regions the Syrian wild ass used to occur in the Middle East. The two subspecies have been reintroduced to the wild of Israel since 1982, and had been breeding hybrids there, whilst the Persian onager alone has been reintroduced to Jordan and the deserts of Saudi Arabia.
In La Peau de Chagrin by Honoré de Balzac, the onager is identified as the animal from which comes the ass' skin or shagreen of the title.
A short poem by Ogden Nash also features the onager:
Characteristics
Evolution
Distribution and habitat
Biology and behaviour
Social structure
Reproduction
Diet
Predation
Threats
Conservation
Relationship with humans
In literature
External links
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