You can make mules by breeding a male donkey with a female horse. but mules themselves can not reproduce. They are sterile. (99.9% of the time)
note: a hinny is the baby of a male horse and a female donkey. (also sterile)
If you want to get a good mule, you can breed different horses with horses with quality's you like, and breed donkeys with donkeys together with quality's you like. Then you can take the donkeys and horses foals and breed them together and make a "good" mule.
That is a mule.
A mule is the offspring of a male donkey and a female horse.
When you breed a male donkey (a jack) with a female horse (a pony is a type of horse), the offspring is called a hinny. This is the opposite of the more well-known cross, the mule, which is the result of breeding a male horse (a stallion) with a female donkey (a jenny).
No, a mule is considered a hybrid as it is half donkey half horse, and donkeys and horses are not different breeds but different species (although they are in the same family). Mules are good as they have the characteristics of both donkeys and horses. They cannot breed due to an irregular number of chromosomes although there have been a very small number of reported times when they have managed.
The terms are confusing. Male mules are infertile.A "mule" is usually the crossing of a female horse (mare) with a male donkey (jack).A "John" Mule is the nickname given to a male mule, though the correct registry term is "horse mule" or "Gelding". Female mules are called mare mules.A "Jack" is the name given to a male donkey/ass. A "Jack" is fertile.A "Jenny" or "Jennet" is the name given to a female donkey/ass. A "Jenny" is fertile.A "hinny" is the name given when a female donkey (Jenny) is bred to a male horse (stallion). A hinny is classified as a mule and pertains to both male and female sexes of the species (male hinnies and female hinnies).There are some terms that were used at the turn of the century that have fallen from use.Mule-jacks were used to produce mules (ie, they are jack donkeys bred to mares). A jennet-jack was used on jennets to produce more donkeys.
Cross between a male horse and female donkey. Similar to a mule, which is between a female horse and a male donkey.
That is a mule.
No, mules of either gender are always sterile.
A mule is the offspring of a male donkey and a female horse.
A male horse and a female donkey breed to produce a mule, which is also known as a jackass.
When you breed a male donkey (a jack) with a female horse (a pony is a type of horse), the offspring is called a hinny. This is the opposite of the more well-known cross, the mule, which is the result of breeding a male horse (a stallion) with a female donkey (a jenny).
a male donkey and a female horse make a mule
No, a mule is considered a hybrid as it is half donkey half horse, and donkeys and horses are not different breeds but different species (although they are in the same family). Mules are good as they have the characteristics of both donkeys and horses. They cannot breed due to an irregular number of chromosomes although there have been a very small number of reported times when they have managed.
Hinny
Answer A male donkey and a female horse. A Hinny is a cross between a male horse and a female donkey.
The terms are confusing. Male mules are infertile.A "mule" is usually the crossing of a female horse (mare) with a male donkey (jack).A "John" Mule is the nickname given to a male mule, though the correct registry term is "horse mule" or "Gelding". Female mules are called mare mules.A "Jack" is the name given to a male donkey/ass. A "Jack" is fertile.A "Jenny" or "Jennet" is the name given to a female donkey/ass. A "Jenny" is fertile.A "hinny" is the name given when a female donkey (Jenny) is bred to a male horse (stallion). A hinny is classified as a mule and pertains to both male and female sexes of the species (male hinnies and female hinnies).There are some terms that were used at the turn of the century that have fallen from use.Mule-jacks were used to produce mules (ie, they are jack donkeys bred to mares). A jennet-jack was used on jennets to produce more donkeys.
Yes they only breed with their breed.The above is only partly true. A donkey is a breed, or species (Equuis asines), It, therefore, can breed true - that is, a male and a female donkey will produce another donkey.However, a donkey can interbreed with a horse as follows:A female horse (mare), and a male donkey will produce a mule.A male horse (stallion), and a female donkey will produce a hinny.