Heavy horses like the Suffolk Punch and Clydesdales are "rarer than pandas" and facing extinction, breeders warn






                              heavy horses

                               Under threat: Suffolk Punches, right, and a Shire at Harry Gotts' farm in Cornwall







Heavy horses that are 'rarer than pandas' are facing extinction,  breeders warn

By David Derbyshire
29th January 2009



Heavy horses could be extinct in Britain within a generation, conservationists warned yesterday.

Some traditional breeds are under such threat that they are said to be rarer than giant pandas.

The Suffolk Punch is listed as ' critical' with only 100 pairs left in the UK.

Others including the Clydesdale are listed as 'vulnerable' with just a few hundred breeding pairs remaining.

Shires  -  Britain's best-known working breed  -  are said to be 'at risk'.

Experts say the huge creatures are dying out before they can be replaced because of a reduction in the number of UK breeders.

Heavy horses have traditionally been used for farm work, pulling wagons and even in warfare where they hauled artillery around the battlefield.

But after the Second World War the increasing use of machinery spelled the end of their widespread use on farms and numbers began to drop.









                           Fact file









The warning about their decline was issued yesterday by animal charities and by Harry Gotts, 80, one of Britain's last heavy-horse breeders.

Mr Gotts, of Redruth, Cornwall, says unless drastic action is taken to increase their numbers they could soon become extinct. 'It is very sad,' he said.

'More Suffolk Punch horses die now than are born. They are rarer than giant pandas. If we are not very careful, they will die out.'

At the the Shire Horse Farm and Carriage Museum in Redruth, Mr Gotts has ten Suffolk Punches, seven Clydesdales and six Shires.

Dawn Teverson, Head of Conservation at the Rare Breeds Survival Trust, said: 'A lot of the mares are used as show animals which means they aren't breeding, and you also can't guarantee that a mare will produce a foal every year.'








Article: HERE

 

What did you think of this article?




Trackbacks
  • No trackbacks exist for this post.
Comments
  • No comments exist for this post.
Leave a comment

Submitted comments are subject to moderation before being displayed.

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.