A mule
If you breed two different varieties of plants together: - they may not be able to cross-breed and there will be no seeds. - or you will get seeds that produce assorted plants with a range of features from both parents. If you breed these new plants together, you will start to see more features appearing as the recessive genes start to pair up and show more different features in that next generation.
hings
The Afrikaans word for 'stallion' is "hings."
A hinny is a hybrid offspring of a male horse (stallion) and a female donkey (jenny). Hinnies are less common than mules, which are the offspring of a male donkey and a female horse. Hinny tend to have a more horse-like appearance compared to mules.
Stallion:male horse over 4 years and has his balls gelding:male horse with no balls stud:male horse used stricty for breeding colt:male horse under 4 years
The process is no different from a stallion mating with a mare or a jack mating with a jenny. Stallion mounts the jenny, inserts his penis in the jenny's vagina, ejaculates and dismounts.
Yes. A jenny is a female donkey, which is an animal. An animal is a noun. So jenny is a noun. :)
The Black Stallion - 1990 Criss Cross 3-15 was released on: USA: 1992
In genetics, a hybrid is crossing two species. It involves more that two genes. A mule is the hybrid of donkey and a mare (horse). If you cross a stallion with a jenny (female donkey) you will get a henny. A henny has no value.
Stallions and jacks are both male.
A stallion is an male horse that has not been gelded. Zebra males are also referred to as stallions.
It's called a Hinney.
A zebra stallion and a horse or donkey mare
A hinny is not a horse, wild or otherwise. A hinny is the offspring of a horse stallion and a donkey jenny. Hinnys, unlike mules, are quite rare as the embryos produced through this mating are less viable than the donkey jack, mare cross.
Nothing. A stallion is an ungelded male horse and a jack is a male donkey. Only females and males can breed together and produce offspring.
A zonkey is a cross between a zebra stallion and a donkey jennet
dog