answersLogoWhite

0

Some animals can cross mate. For instance, a horse mated with a donkey can produce a mule or jenny. Lions mated with tigers produce ligers. Zebras mated with horses produce zebroids ot zorses. A buffalo mated with a cow produces a beefalo. Female camels and male llamas make camas. A leopard and a lion make a leopon. A serval and a common house cat make a savannah. Donkeys and zebras bred together make a donkra. A savannah and Asian leopard make an ashera.

This one gets complicated: the male offspring of a yak and domestic cow is a dzo, while the female is a dzomo or zhom. Some English speakers refer to either male or female progeny as yakow. The female hybrid is fertile while males are sterile. So a dzomo bred with a yak bull produces an ortoom, and a female ortoom bred with a domestic bull or yak bull produces a usan güzee.

Many similar species animals are able to breed relatively easy with each other. In the case of the camel/llama cross, only female camels are able to produce offspring. Female llamas and male camels are not able to breed. Likewise, a cross between Africa and Asian elephants often results in the death of the mother and offspring; a bleeding disorder results from the pregnancy typically killing both.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

What else can I help you with?