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It is a large donkey breed with a very long shaggy coat and no dorsal stripe: Benderi: Iran: Biyang: China: Bourik: Haiti: Brasil: Venezuela: Bulgaro: Venezuela: Bulgarian donkey: Bulgaria: Burro: Mexico, Nicaragua, United States: small donkey of Mexico and the U.S. seen in both domesticated and feral states; some feral burros in the western U ...
The Fariñeiro is smaller than other mainland Spanish donkey breeds; it stands about 1.00-1.20 metres at the withers and weighs 120–180 kg. The coat is fine, dense and smooth, of medium length; it is grey or pale brown in colour, and paler on the underparts. The darker dorsal stripe and shoulder-stripe may be more or less distinct. [3]
The Maltese donkey also known as Ħmar Malti is a breed of donkey originated in Malta. It used to be used as a beast of burden. [ 1 ] It is a relatively small breed of donkey with a compact body.
The donkey was born at a pint-sized 16.5 inches to mom Itsy Bitsy Annie, who was 27.5 inches tall and father GP Billy Bob, who was 29 inches tall. Obviously those are pretty impressive stats. But ...
The Asno de las Encartaciones is the only small donkey breed in Spain. It stands about 120 cm and weighs approximately 200 kg. The coat is black or dark bay in colour; the belly, muzzle and surround of the eyes are pale-coloured. It may have a darker dorsal stripe. [4]
The Norman donkey, French: Âne Normand, is a breed of domestic donkey from Normandy, in north-west France. It is found mainly in the present-day Lower Normandy and Upper Normandy regions, and is also present in Brittany and the Pays de Loire. It is the smallest of the seven recognised French donkey breeds. [4]
Bart isn't just a full-sized donk, he's a 17-year-old donkey that weighs over 1,000 lbs. Meanwhile Wolfie is "just over 100 [lbs.]," they added. That's quite a difference.
[8]: 122 It is also possible that the breed descends from white donkeys imported from Egypt in the nineteenth century by the Duca dell'Asinara. [5]: 158 Like all Italian breeds of donkey, the Asinara is endangered. Its conservation status was listed as "critical" by the FAO in 2007, and was reported to DAD-IS as "critical" in 2021.