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{{short description|Врсте сисара}}
{{Taxobox
{{Taxobox
| name = Јак
| name = Јак
| status = vu
| status = vu
| status_system = IUCN3.1
| status_system = IUCN3.1
| status_ref = <ref name="iucn">{{IUCN |assessors=Buzzard, P. & Berger, J. |year=2016 |id=2892/101293528 |title=''-{Bos mutus}-'' |version=2019.3}} База података укључује и доказе о ризику угрожености. {{ен}}</ref>
| status_ref = <ref name="iucn">{{IUCN |author=Buzzard, P. |author2= Berger, J. |year=2016 |id=2892/101293528 |title=''-{Bos mutus}-'' |version=2019.3}} База података укључује и доказе о ризику угрожености. {{ен}}</ref>
| image = Bos grunniens at Yundrok Yumtso Lake.jpg
| image = Bos grunniens at Yundrok Yumtso Lake.jpg
| image_caption = ''-{Bos grunniens}-''
| image_caption = ''-{Bos grunniens}-''
| image_width = 250px
| regnum = -{[[Животиње|Animalia]]}-
| regnum = -{[[Животиње|Animalia]]}-
| phylum = -{[[Хордати|Chordata]]}-
| phylum = -{[[Хордати|Chordata]]}-
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''-{Poephagus grunniens}-''
''-{Poephagus grunniens}-''
}}
}}

'''Јак''' ({{јез-лат|Bos grunniens}}) врста је крупног [[говеда]], која може укључујући грбу на леђима да достигне висину од 1,8 -{m}-, а тежину од 1.000 -{kg}-. Тело му је покривено дугом, густом длаком, која висећи ресасто са бока сеже до чланака. Живи на висоравнима [[Тибет]]а и [[Сичуан|Сечуана]] ([[Кина]]) и у [[Индија|Индији]], на надморским висинама од преко 4.000 -{m}-. Станишта врсте су [[планина|планине]], [[трава|травна]] вегетација, [[тундра]], [[језеро|језера]] и језерски екосистеми и [[пустиња|пустиње]].
'''Јак''' ({{јез-лат|Bos grunniens}}) врста је крупног [[Говедо|говеда]], која може укључујући грбу на леђима да достигне висину од 1,8 -{m}-, а тежину од 1.000 -{kg}-. Тело му је покривено дугом, густом длаком, која висећи ресасто са бока сеже до чланака. Живи на висоравнима [[Тибет]]а и [[Сичуан|Сечуана]] ([[Кина]]) и у [[Индија|Индији]], на надморским висинама од преко 4.000 -{m}-. Станишта врсте су [[планина|планине]], [[трава|травна]] вегетација, [[тундра]], [[језеро|језера]] и језерски екосистеми и [[пустиња|пустиње]].


== Домаћи јак ==
== Домаћи јак ==
Ред 28: Ред 31:
== Угроженост ==
== Угроженост ==
Ова врста се сматра [[статус угрожености|рањивом]] у погледу угрожености врсте од изумирања.<ref name="iucn" />
Ова врста се сматра [[статус угрожености|рањивом]] у погледу угрожености врсте од изумирања.<ref name="iucn" />

== Таксономија ==
{{рут}}
The ancestor of the wild and domestic yak is thought to have diverged from ''[[Aurochs|Bos primigenius]]'' at a point between one and five million years ago.<ref name=Guo2006>{{cite journal | author = Guo, S | year = 2006 | title = Taxonomic placement and origin of yaks: implications from analyses of mtDNA D-loop fragment sequences |url=http://www.mammal.cn/EN/abstract/abstract2079.shtml| journal = Acta Theriologica Sinica | volume = 26 | issue = 4 | pages = 325–330|display-authors=etal}}</ref> The wild yak is now normally treated as a separate species from the domestic yak (''Bos grunniens'').<ref name=iczn2027>{{cite journal | others = International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature | year = 2003 | title = Opinion 2027. Usage of 17 specific names based on wild species which are predated by or contemporary with those based on domestic animals (Lepidoptera, Osteichthyes, Mammalia): conserved | journal = Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature | volume = 60 | pages = 81–84 | url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/34357823}}</ref>

== Опис ==
The wild yak is among the largest extant bovid species. Adults stand about {{Convert|1.6|to|2.05|m|ft|abbr=on}} tall at the shoulder, and weigh {{Convert|500|-|1200|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. The head and body length is {{Convert|2.4|to|3.8|m|ft|abbr=on|sigfig=2}}, not counting the tail of {{convert|60|to|100|cm|in|abbr=on}}.<ref name=Han2014>Han Jianlin, M. Melletti, J. Burton, 2014, Wild yak (Bos mutus Przewalski, 1883), Ecology, Evolution and Behavior of Wild Cattle: Implications for Conservation, Chapter 1, p.203, [[Cambridge University Press]]</ref> The females are about one-third the weight and are about 30% smaller in their linear dimensions when compared to bull wild yaks. Domesticated yaks (''Bos grunniens)'' are somewhat smaller.<ref>Nowak, R. (1999). ''Walker's Mammals of the World, 6th Edition, Volume II''. Baltimore: [[Johns Hopkins University Press]] (quoted in [http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Bos_grunniens.html Oliphant, M. 2003. "Bos grunniens" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed 4 April 2009])</ref><ref>Boitani, Luigi (1984). ''Simon & Schuster's Guide to Mammals.'' Simon & Schuster/Touchstone Books, {{ISBN|978-0-671-42805-1}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://zsienvis.nic.in/endb/end_mam/bos_grunniens.htm |title=Bos grunniens (Linnaeus). zsienvis.nic.in |access-date=3 December 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090416203715/http://zsienvis.nic.in/endb/end_mam/bos_grunniens.htm |archive-date=16 April 2009 }}</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20130310080154/http://www.arkive.org/wild-yak/bos-mutus/image-G13952.html#text=Facts Wild yak photo – Bos mutus – G13952] . ARKive. Retrieved on 19 December 2012.</ref>

They are heavily built animals with a bulky frame, sturdy legs, and rounded cloven hooves. To protect against the cold, the [[udder]] in females and the [[scrotum]] in males are small, and covered in a layer of hair. Females have four [[teat]]s. Both sexes have long shaggy hair, with a dense woolly undercoat over the chest, flanks, and thighs for insulation against the cold. In males especially, this undercoat may form a long "skirt" that can reach the ground. The tail is long and horse-like, rather than tufted like the tails of cattle or [[bison]]. The coat is typically black or dark brown, covering most of the body, with a grey muzzle (although some wild golden-brown individuals have been reported). Wild yaks with gold coloured hair are known as the wild golden yak ({{zh|c=金色野牦牛|p=jīnsèyě máoniú}}). They are considered an endangered subspecies in China, with an estimated population of 170 left in the wild.<ref name=Leslie2009>{{cite journal |author1=Leslie, D.M. |author2=Schaller, G.B. |year=2009 |title=''Bos grunniens'' and ''Bos mutus'' (Artiodactyla: Bovidae) |journal=Mammalian Species |volume=836 |pages=1–17 |doi=10.1644/836.1 |doi-access=free}}</ref>

Two morphological types have been identified, so-called ''Qilian'' and ''Kunlun''.<ref name=Han2014 />

== Распрострањеност и станиште ==
Wild yaks once ranged up to southern [[Siberia]] to the east of [[Lake Baikal]],<ref>Stanley J. Olsen, 1990, Fossil Ancestry of the Yak, Its Cultural Significance and Domestication in Tibet, p.75, Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, [[Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University]]</ref> but became extinct in Russia around the 17th century.<ref>Daniel J Miller, Gui Quan. Cai, Richard B. Harris, 1994, Wild yaks and their conservation on the Tibetan plateau, Ecology, Evolution and Behavior of Wild Cattle: Implications for Conservation, Chapter 12, Cambridge University Press</ref>
Today, wild yaks are found primarily in northern [[Tibet]] and western [[Qinghai]], with some populations extending into the southernmost parts of [[Xinjiang]], and into [[Ladakh]] in India. Small, isolated populations of wild yak are also found farther afield, primarily in western Tibet and eastern Qinghai. In historic times, wild yaks were also found in [[Bhutan]], but they are now considered extinct there.<ref name=iucn />

The primary habitat of wild yaks consists of treeless uplands between {{Convert|3000|and|5500|m|ft|abbr=on|sigfig=2}}, dominated by mountains and [[plateau]]s. They are most commonly found in [[alpine tundra]] with a relatively thick carpet of grasses and sedges rather than the more barren [[steppe]] country.<ref name=Schaller1996>{{cite journal | author1 = Schaller, G.B. | author2 = Liu, W. |year = 1996 | title = Distribution, status, and conservation of wild yak ''Bos grunniens'' | journal = Biological Conservation | volume = 76 | issue = 1 | pages = 1–8 | doi = 10.1016/0006-3207(96)85972-6}}</ref>

The wild yak was thought to be regionally extinct in [[Nepal]] in the 1970s, but was rediscovered in [[Humla]] in 2014.<ref>[https://honeyguideapps.com/blog/extinct-wild-yak-found-in-nepal Extinct Wild Yak found in Nepal]</ref><ref>Raju Acharya, Yadav Ghimirey, Geraldine Werhahn, Naresh Kusi, Bidhan Adhikary, Binod Kunwar, 2015, Wild yak Bos mutus in Nepal: rediscovery of a flagship species</ref> This discovery later made the species to be painted on Nepal's currency.<ref>Josua Learn, 2019, [https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/snapping-the-yak-how-an-iconic-photo-ended-up-on-nepals-currency Snapping the Yak: How an Iconic Photo Ended Up on Nepal's Currency]</ref>

===Behaviour and ecology===
[[File:Wild oxen, sheep and goats of all lands, living and extinct (Plate IV) BHL9370000.jpg|thumb|A painting of a wild yak, published by [[Rowland Ward]] LTD in 1898.]]
The diet of wild yaks consists largely of grasses and sedges, such as ''[[Carex]]'', ''[[Stipa]]'', and ''[[Kobresia]]''. They also eat a smaller amount of herbs, [[Krascheninnikovia|winterfat]] shrubs, and mosses, and have even been reported to eat [[lichen]]. Historically, the main natural predator of the wild yak has been the [[Himalayan wolf]], but [[Himalayan black bear]]s, [[Himalayan brown bear]]s and [[snow leopard]]s have also been reported as predators in some areas, likely of young or infirm wild yaks.<ref name=Leslie2009/>

[[Thubten Jigme Norbu]], the elder brother of the [[14th Dalai Lama]], reported on his journey from [[Kumbum]] in [[Amdo]] to [[Lhasa]] in 1950:
{{quote|Before long I was to see the vast herds of drongs with my own eyes. The sight of those beautiful and powerful beasts who from time immemorial have made their home on [[Tibet]]'s high and barren plateaux never ceased to fascinate me. Somehow these shy creatures manage to sustain themselves on the stunted grass roots which is all that nature provides in those parts. And what a wonderful sight it is to see a great herd of them plunging head down in a wild gallop across the steppes. The earth shakes under their heels and a vast cloud of dust marks their passage. At nights they will protect themselves from the cold by huddling up together, with the calves in the centre. They will stand like this in a snow-storm, pressed so close together that the condensation from their breath rises into the air like a column of steam. The nomads have occasionally tried to bring up young drongs as domestic animals, but they have never entirely succeeded. Somehow once they live together with human beings they seem to lose their astonishing strength and powers of endurance; and they are no use at all as [[pack animal]]s, because their backs immediately get sore. Their immemorial relationship with humans has therefore remained that of game and hunter, for their flesh is very tasty.|sign=Thubten Norbu|source=''Tibet is My Country''<ref>''Tibet is My Country: Autobiography of Thubten Jigme Norbu, Brother of the Dalai Lama as told to Heinrich Harrer'', p. 151. First published in German in 1960. English translation by Edward Fitzgerald, published 1960. Reprint, with updated new chapter, (1986). [[Wisdom Publications]], London. {{ISBN|0-86171-045-2}}.</ref>}}

Wild yaks are [[herd]] animals. Herds can contain several hundred individuals, although many are much smaller. Herds consist primarily of females and their young, with a smaller number of adult males. On average female yaks graze 100m higher than males. Females with young tend to choose grazing ground on high, steep slopes.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Berger |first1=J. |last2=Cheng|first2=E. |last3=Kang|first3=A. |last4=Krebs|first4=M. |last5=Li|first5=L. |last6=Lu|first6=Z.X. |last7=Buqiong|last8=B. |last9=Schaller|first9=G.B. |date=2014 |title=Sex differences in ecology of wild yaks at high elevation in the Kekexili Reserve, Tibetan Qinghai Plateau, China |journal=Journal of Mammalogy |volume=95 |issue=3 |pages=638–645 |doi=10.1644/13-MAMM-A-154 |doi-access=free}}</ref> The remaining males are either solitary, or found in much smaller groups, averaging around six individuals. Groups move into lower altitude ranges during the winter.<ref name=iucn /> Although wild yaks can become aggressive when defending young, or during the [[Rut (mammalian reproduction)|rut]], they generally avoid humans, and may flee for great distances if approached.<ref name=Leslie2009/>

===Reproduction===
{{main|Yak#Reproduction and life history}}
Wild yaks mate in summer and give birth to a single calf the following spring.<ref name=Wiener>Wiener, G.; Jianlin, H.; Ruijun, L. (2003). [http://www.fao.org/DOCREP/006/AD347E/ad347e08.htm "4 The Yak in Relation to Its Environment"], ''The Yak, Second Edition''. Bangkok: Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, {{ISBN|92-5-104965-3}}. Accessed 8 August 2008.</ref> Females typically only give birth every other year.<ref name=Leslie2009/>

== Конзервација ==
The wild yak is currently listed as [[vulnerable species|Vulnerable]] on the [[IUCN Red List]]. It was previously classified as [[endangered species|Endangered]], but was downlisted in 1996 based on the estimated rate of population decline and current population sizes. The latest assessment in 2008 suggested a total population of no more than 10,000 mature individuals.<ref name=iucn />

The wild yak is experiencing threats applied by several sources. Poaching, including commercial poaching, has remained the most serious threat; males are particularly impacted because of their more solitary habits. Disturbance by and interbreeding with livestock herds is also common. This may include the transmission of cattle-borne diseases, although no direct evidence of this has yet been found. Conflicts with herders themselves, as in preventive and retaliatory killings for abduction of domestic yaks by wild herds, also occur but appear to be relatively rare. Recent protection from poaching particularly appears to have stabilized or even increased population sizes in several areas, leading to the IUCN downlisting in 2008. In both China and India, the species is officially protected; in China it is present in a number of large nature reserves.<ref name=iucn />

== Утицај на људе ==
The wild yak is a reservoir for [[Zoonosis|zoonotic diseases]] of both bacterial and viral origins. Such bacterial diseases include [[anthrax]], [[botulism]], [[tetanus]], and [[tuberculosis]].<ref>{{Cite document|url=https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/d146/0d4d927051b6c27c38cd29dbd7a4fceb52f7.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180919061920/https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/d146/0d4d927051b6c27c38cd29dbd7a4fceb52f7.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-date=19 September 2018|title=Bacterial and Viral Zoonotic Diseases of Yak|last=Dubal|first=Z|date=2013|s2cid=51834203|access-date=18 September 2018}}</ref>


== Референце ==
== Референце ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist|}}


== Литература ==
== Литература ==
{{refbegin|}}
* [https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/2892/101293528 -{IUCN}- црвена листа угрожених врста, детаљнији подаци о врсти {{ен}}]
* {{Cite journal |last=Scherf |first=Beate |date=2000 |title=World Watch List for Domestic Animal Diversity |url=https://www.fao.org/3/x8750e/x8750e.pdf |journal=World Watch List for Domestic Animal Diversity |publisher=FAO |pages=653}}
* {{cite journal | author = Guo, S.| year = 2006 | title = Taxonomic placement and origin of yaks: implications from analyses of mtDNA D-loop fragment sequences |url=http://www.mammal.cn/EN/abstract/abstract2079.shtml| journal = Acta Theriologica Sinica | volume = 26 | issue = 4 | pages = |display-authors=etal}}
* {{cite journal | others = International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature | year = 2003 | title = Opinion 2027. Usage of 17 specific names based on wild species which are predated by or contemporary with those based on domestic animals (Lepidoptera, Osteichthyes, Mammalia): conserved | journal = Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature | volume = 60 | pages = | url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/34357823}}
* {{Cite journal | doi = 10.1016/j.jas.2003.10.006| title = The naming of wild animal species and their domestic derivatives| journal = Journal of Archaeological Science| volume = 31| issue = 5| pages = | year = 2004| last1 = Gentry | first1 = A. | last2 = Clutton-Brock | first2 = J. | last3 = Groves | first3 = C. P. }}
* {{cite journal | author1 = Leslie, D.M. | author2 = Schaller, G.B. | year = 2009 | title = ''Bos grunniens'' and ''Bos mutus'' (Artiodactyla: Bovidae) | journal = Mammalian Species | volume = 836 | pages = | doi = 10.1644/836.1 | doi-access = free }}
* Buchholtz, C. (1990). True Cattle (Genus ''Bos''). pp. 386–397 in S. Parker, ed. ''Grzimek's Encyclopedia of Mammals, Volume 5''. New York: McGraw-Hill Publishing Company. (quoted in [http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Bos_grunniens.html Oliphant, M. (2003). ''Bos grunniens'' (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed 4 April 2009])
{{refend}}


== Спољашње везе ==
== Спољашње везе ==
{{Категорија на Остави|Bos mutus}}
{{Категорија на Остави|Bos mutus}}
{{Викиврсте|Bos mutus}}
{{Викиврсте|Bos mutus}}
* [https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/2892/101293528 -{IUCN}- црвена листа угрожених врста, детаљнији подаци о врсти {{ен}}]
{{клица-сисари}}
* ARKive – [https://web.archive.org/web/20080915170705/http://www.arkive.org/species/GES/mammals/Bos_grunniens/ images and movies of the wild yak ''(Bos grunniens)'']
{{Taxonbar}}{{портал бар|Биологија}}
* [http://www.animalinfo.org/species/artiperi/bos_mutu.htm AnimalInfo.Org: Animal Info – Wild Yak]
* {{cite web|url=http://www.fao.org/docrep/006/AD347E/ad347e06.htm|title=The Yak. Chapter 2: Yak breeds|website=FAO|access-date=2017-08-31}}

{{Taxonbar|from=Q26547}}
{{портал бар|Биологија}}


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[[Категорија:Говеда]]

Верзија на датум 27. мај 2022. у 14:11

Јак
Bos grunniens
Научна класификација
Царство:
Тип:
Класа:
Ред:
Породица:
Род:
Врста:
B. grunniens
Биномно име
Bos grunniens
Linnaeus, 1766
Синоними

Bos mutus Przewalski, 1883
Poephagus grunniens

Јак (лат. Bos grunniens) врста је крупног говеда, која може укључујући грбу на леђима да достигне висину од 1,8 m, а тежину од 1.000 kg. Тело му је покривено дугом, густом длаком, која висећи ресасто са бока сеже до чланака. Живи на висоравнима Тибета и Сечуана (Кина) и у Индији, на надморским висинама од преко 4.000 m. Станишта врсте су планине, травна вегетација, тундра, језера и језерски екосистеми и пустиње.

Домаћи јак

Јак (Bos grunniens) је одомаћен већ вековима, мада још увек у забаченим, неприступачним областима живе дивљи примерци (Bos mutus). Иако постоје битне разлике у величини између домаће и дивље пасмине, нема никаквих потешкоћа у њиховом узајамном парењу. Домаћи јак се користи за јахање и као теглећа животиња. Од њега се добија кожа, млеко и месо; од дугих длака се праве конопци, а од исушеног ђубрета огрев.

Угроженост

Ова врста се сматра рањивом у погледу угрожености врсте од изумирања.[1]

Таксономија

The ancestor of the wild and domestic yak is thought to have diverged from Bos primigenius at a point between one and five million years ago.[2] The wild yak is now normally treated as a separate species from the domestic yak (Bos grunniens).[3]

Опис

The wild yak is among the largest extant bovid species. Adults stand about 16 to 205 m (52 to 673 ft) tall at the shoulder, and weigh 500—1.200 kg (1.100—2.600 lb). The head and body length is 24 to 38 m (79 to 120 ft), not counting the tail of 60 to 100 cm (24 to 39 in).[4] The females are about one-third the weight and are about 30% smaller in their linear dimensions when compared to bull wild yaks. Domesticated yaks (Bos grunniens) are somewhat smaller.[5][6][7][8]

They are heavily built animals with a bulky frame, sturdy legs, and rounded cloven hooves. To protect against the cold, the udder in females and the scrotum in males are small, and covered in a layer of hair. Females have four teats. Both sexes have long shaggy hair, with a dense woolly undercoat over the chest, flanks, and thighs for insulation against the cold. In males especially, this undercoat may form a long "skirt" that can reach the ground. The tail is long and horse-like, rather than tufted like the tails of cattle or bison. The coat is typically black or dark brown, covering most of the body, with a grey muzzle (although some wild golden-brown individuals have been reported). Wild yaks with gold coloured hair are known as the wild golden yak (). They are considered an endangered subspecies in China, with an estimated population of 170 left in the wild.[9]

Two morphological types have been identified, so-called Qilian and Kunlun.[4]

Распрострањеност и станиште

Wild yaks once ranged up to southern Siberia to the east of Lake Baikal,[10] but became extinct in Russia around the 17th century.[11] Today, wild yaks are found primarily in northern Tibet and western Qinghai, with some populations extending into the southernmost parts of Xinjiang, and into Ladakh in India. Small, isolated populations of wild yak are also found farther afield, primarily in western Tibet and eastern Qinghai. In historic times, wild yaks were also found in Bhutan, but they are now considered extinct there.[1]

The primary habitat of wild yaks consists of treeless uplands between 3.000 and 5.500 m (9.800 and 18.000 ft), dominated by mountains and plateaus. They are most commonly found in alpine tundra with a relatively thick carpet of grasses and sedges rather than the more barren steppe country.[12]

The wild yak was thought to be regionally extinct in Nepal in the 1970s, but was rediscovered in Humla in 2014.[13][14] This discovery later made the species to be painted on Nepal's currency.[15]

Behaviour and ecology

A painting of a wild yak, published by Rowland Ward LTD in 1898.

The diet of wild yaks consists largely of grasses and sedges, such as Carex, Stipa, and Kobresia. They also eat a smaller amount of herbs, winterfat shrubs, and mosses, and have even been reported to eat lichen. Historically, the main natural predator of the wild yak has been the Himalayan wolf, but Himalayan black bears, Himalayan brown bears and snow leopards have also been reported as predators in some areas, likely of young or infirm wild yaks.[9]

Thubten Jigme Norbu, the elder brother of the 14th Dalai Lama, reported on his journey from Kumbum in Amdo to Lhasa in 1950:

Before long I was to see the vast herds of drongs with my own eyes. The sight of those beautiful and powerful beasts who from time immemorial have made their home on Tibet's high and barren plateaux never ceased to fascinate me. Somehow these shy creatures manage to sustain themselves on the stunted grass roots which is all that nature provides in those parts. And what a wonderful sight it is to see a great herd of them plunging head down in a wild gallop across the steppes. The earth shakes under their heels and a vast cloud of dust marks their passage. At nights they will protect themselves from the cold by huddling up together, with the calves in the centre. They will stand like this in a snow-storm, pressed so close together that the condensation from their breath rises into the air like a column of steam. The nomads have occasionally tried to bring up young drongs as domestic animals, but they have never entirely succeeded. Somehow once they live together with human beings they seem to lose their astonishing strength and powers of endurance; and they are no use at all as pack animals, because their backs immediately get sore. Their immemorial relationship with humans has therefore remained that of game and hunter, for their flesh is very tasty.

— Thubten Norbu, Tibet is My Country[16]

Wild yaks are herd animals. Herds can contain several hundred individuals, although many are much smaller. Herds consist primarily of females and their young, with a smaller number of adult males. On average female yaks graze 100m higher than males. Females with young tend to choose grazing ground on high, steep slopes.[17] The remaining males are either solitary, or found in much smaller groups, averaging around six individuals. Groups move into lower altitude ranges during the winter.[1] Although wild yaks can become aggressive when defending young, or during the rut, they generally avoid humans, and may flee for great distances if approached.[9]

Reproduction

Wild yaks mate in summer and give birth to a single calf the following spring.[18] Females typically only give birth every other year.[9]

Конзервација

The wild yak is currently listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List. It was previously classified as Endangered, but was downlisted in 1996 based on the estimated rate of population decline and current population sizes. The latest assessment in 2008 suggested a total population of no more than 10,000 mature individuals.[1]

The wild yak is experiencing threats applied by several sources. Poaching, including commercial poaching, has remained the most serious threat; males are particularly impacted because of their more solitary habits. Disturbance by and interbreeding with livestock herds is also common. This may include the transmission of cattle-borne diseases, although no direct evidence of this has yet been found. Conflicts with herders themselves, as in preventive and retaliatory killings for abduction of domestic yaks by wild herds, also occur but appear to be relatively rare. Recent protection from poaching particularly appears to have stabilized or even increased population sizes in several areas, leading to the IUCN downlisting in 2008. In both China and India, the species is officially protected; in China it is present in a number of large nature reserves.[1]

Утицај на људе

The wild yak is a reservoir for zoonotic diseases of both bacterial and viral origins. Such bacterial diseases include anthrax, botulism, tetanus, and tuberculosis.[19]

Референце

  1. ^ а б в г д ђ Buzzard, P.; Berger, J. (2016). Bos mutus. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2019.3. International Union for Conservation of Nature.  База података укључује и доказе о ризику угрожености. (језик: енглески)
  2. ^ Guo, S; et al. (2006). „Taxonomic placement and origin of yaks: implications from analyses of mtDNA D-loop fragment sequences”. Acta Theriologica Sinica. 26 (4): 325—330. 
  3. ^ . International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. „Opinion 2027. Usage of 17 specific names based on wild species which are predated by or contemporary with those based on domestic animals (Lepidoptera, Osteichthyes, Mammalia): conserved”. Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature. 60: 81—84. 2003. 
  4. ^ а б Han Jianlin, M. Melletti, J. Burton, 2014, Wild yak (Bos mutus Przewalski, 1883), Ecology, Evolution and Behavior of Wild Cattle: Implications for Conservation, Chapter 1, p.203, Cambridge University Press
  5. ^ Nowak, R. (1999). Walker's Mammals of the World, 6th Edition, Volume II. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press (quoted in Oliphant, M. 2003. "Bos grunniens" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed 4 April 2009)
  6. ^ Boitani, Luigi (1984). Simon & Schuster's Guide to Mammals. Simon & Schuster/Touchstone Books, ISBN 978-0-671-42805-1
  7. ^ „Bos grunniens (Linnaeus). zsienvis.nic.in”. Архивирано из оригинала 16. 4. 2009. г. Приступљено 3. 12. 2016. 
  8. ^ Wild yak photo – Bos mutus – G13952 . ARKive. Retrieved on 19 December 2012.
  9. ^ а б в г Leslie, D.M.; Schaller, G.B. (2009). „Bos grunniens and Bos mutus (Artiodactyla: Bovidae)”. Mammalian Species. 836: 1—17. doi:10.1644/836.1Слободан приступ. 
  10. ^ Stanley J. Olsen, 1990, Fossil Ancestry of the Yak, Its Cultural Significance and Domestication in Tibet, p.75, Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University
  11. ^ Daniel J Miller, Gui Quan. Cai, Richard B. Harris, 1994, Wild yaks and their conservation on the Tibetan plateau, Ecology, Evolution and Behavior of Wild Cattle: Implications for Conservation, Chapter 12, Cambridge University Press
  12. ^ Schaller, G.B.; Liu, W. (1996). „Distribution, status, and conservation of wild yak Bos grunniens”. Biological Conservation. 76 (1): 1—8. doi:10.1016/0006-3207(96)85972-6. 
  13. ^ Extinct Wild Yak found in Nepal
  14. ^ Raju Acharya, Yadav Ghimirey, Geraldine Werhahn, Naresh Kusi, Bidhan Adhikary, Binod Kunwar, 2015, Wild yak Bos mutus in Nepal: rediscovery of a flagship species
  15. ^ Josua Learn, 2019, Snapping the Yak: How an Iconic Photo Ended Up on Nepal's Currency
  16. ^ Tibet is My Country: Autobiography of Thubten Jigme Norbu, Brother of the Dalai Lama as told to Heinrich Harrer, p. 151. First published in German in 1960. English translation by Edward Fitzgerald, published 1960. Reprint, with updated new chapter, (1986). Wisdom Publications, London. ISBN 0-86171-045-2.
  17. ^ Berger, J.; Cheng, E.; Kang, A.; Krebs, M.; Li, L.; Lu, Z.X.; Buqiong; B.; Schaller, G.B. (2014). „Sex differences in ecology of wild yaks at high elevation in the Kekexili Reserve, Tibetan Qinghai Plateau, China”. Journal of Mammalogy. 95 (3): 638—645. doi:10.1644/13-MAMM-A-154Слободан приступ. 
  18. ^ Wiener, G.; Jianlin, H.; Ruijun, L. (2003). "4 The Yak in Relation to Its Environment", The Yak, Second Edition. Bangkok: Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, ISBN 92-5-104965-3. Accessed 8 August 2008.
  19. ^ Dubal, Z (2013). „Bacterial and Viral Zoonotic Diseases of Yak” (PDF). S2CID 51834203. Архивирано из оригинала (PDF) 19. 9. 2018. г. Приступљено 18. 9. 2018. 

Литература

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