The Misaki ( or 岬馬, Misaki uma) is an endangered Japanese breed of small horse. It is one of eight Japanese native horse breeds, and lives as a feral horse in a natural setting in a designated National Monument on Cape Toi (also known as Toimisaki) within the municipal boundaries of Kushima at the south end of Miyazaki Prefecture on the island of Kyūshū. The Misaki was made a Japanese National Natural Treasure in 1953.
The Misaki and the area in which it lives, Cape Toi, were declared a Natural Monument in 1953 (Shōwa 28)..
The Misaki was classified as "critical-maintained" by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations in 2007. No population data has been reported to DAD-IS since 2008, when the breed numbered approximately 120 head, up from a low of 53 individuals recorded in 1973. In 2025 its conservation status was unknown.
A genetic study of Japanese and Mongolian horse breeds in 2003 found the Misaki to be most closely related to the Noma, Tokara and Yonaguni breeds. In 2011, twelve horses of the Misaki herd gave positive Coggins test results for equine infectious anaemia. From the blood of one of them, the whole viral genome was sequenced. It was found to be substantially different from the two equine infectious anaemia strains that had previously been completely sequenced.
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