Yak

From Freepedia

This article is about the animal. See Yakovlev for the aircraft, Jeff Minter for the game designer or Yacc for the language parser generator.
Yak
Image:Yak Drawing historic.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Order:Artiodactyla
Family:Bovidae
Genus:Bos
Species: B. gruniens
Binomial name
Bos gruniens
Linnaeus, 1766

The yak (Bos grunniens) is a long-haired humped domestic bovine found in Tibet and throughout the Himalayan region of south central Asia. In Tibetan, the word yak refers only to the male of the species; a female is a dri or nak. In English, however, yak is usually used for both genders.

Wild yak (Bos mutus) stand about two meters tall at the shoulder. Domestic yak are about half that height. Both types have long shaggy hair to insulate them from the cold. Wild yak can be either brown or black. Domesticated ones can also be white. Yak milk is pink.

Domesticated yak are kept primarily for their milk, fiber, and meat; they are also used as beasts of burden, transporting goods across mountain passes for local farmers and traders as well as in support of climbing and trekking expeditions. Often the pack animals are actually crossbreeds of the yak and Bos taurus (common domestic cattle). These are known in Tibetan as dzo or dzopkyo.

Yak fiber is soft and smooth, in several colors, including shades of gray, brown, black and white. The length of yak fiber is about 1.2 inches. It is combed or shed from the yak and then dehaired. The result is a splendid downy fiber that can be spun into yarn for knitting.

Unlike cattle, yaks grunt rather than moo. Many wild yaks are killed for food by the Tibetans; they are now an endangered species. Yaks can weigh over 1200 pounds and have a lifespan of 20-25 years.

Image:Yaks still provide the best way to plow fields in Tibet.jpg Image:In Tibet, yaks are decorated and honored by the families they are part of.jpg

Trivia

Mongolia boasts the second largest population of yaks in the World. It is for this reason that they host their annual Yak Festival to celebrate the "strong and productive animal". The last festival was held on 1 - 2 August 2005. [1] [2]


External Link

Yaks: The Bison of Tibet



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