Zebras in captivity.

You could be thinking about the Randolph Hearst estate in California. He had a private zoo collection on the grounds which contained a herd of zebras. After his death the collection was sent off to other organizations except for the zebras. Nobody wanted them. They were set free, and not cared for on the estate in the California countryside, and have prospered very well in the wild, greatly increasing in numbers. I have not seen them, but have friends that say they have seen a large herd of zebra while driving up the Pacific Coast Highway. They describe it as a very strange sight.
They were not set free, they are still fenced.
 
South Africa allows export of quite many wild ungulates. I wonder whether Cape mountain zebras could be exported, too?
 
Maybe they could, but the question is also wether there would be any interest to set up a breeding program for them. In Europe for example there are already 3 breeding programs in place (Grevy - EEP, Hartmann - EEP and Maneless - Mon-P) and 3 more subspecies of plains zebra are semi- to very well established.
 
In Europe at least there isn't much space left if you'd turn every current population in a sustainable one. Hartmanns mountain, maneless and even Burchells need to grow to make the population sustainable in the long term. The grevy is currently at carrying capacity I believe. This means that only the non-subspefic, the grant's and the chapman are able to free up spaces, but the non-subspecifics should only have low numbers left in Europe and the chapman population is also not that excessive.

When looking at the current populations:
E. grevy: 59 zoos, taken as standard for carrying capacity
E. zebra hartmannae: 30 zoos --> + 30 needed
E. quagga boehmi: 162 zoos --> -100 in theory
E. q. borensis: 13 zoos --> + 47 needed
E. q. burchelli: 35 zoos --> +25 needed
E. q. chapmani: 97 zoos --> -37 in theory
E. q. ssp.: 24 zoos --> ideally all 24 freed up

This is of-course a rough schematic, some zoos keep more or larger herds and others keep small herds made up of more then one subspecies. What we can roughly learn from this is that only in ideal circumstances, about 60 spaces would be available for another species. Zoo population management however is messy and getting each (sub-)species to this level is almost impossible. I even doubt that they will be able to elevate each (sub-)species to this sustainable level and I wouldn't be surprised if EAZA would decide to phase out burchelli in favor of the other populations.
 
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I decide it might be interesting to dive a bit further into these modesl. This model above of-course doesn't take into account that for some species the average herd size is smaller then others or that for some species the relative number of males that get to breed is higher then for others. Both factors affect the effective population size used in the classical 50/500 rule.

Based on ZTL i suspect average herd-size to be about 3,5 (or 3.5) - 5 for most populations. This means for 60 zoos about 210 - 300 zebra's. Taking into account that not every female breeds and that breeding males almost always have several foals resulting in several males that can not breed, I estimate the effective population size to be about 30 - 65% of the total population. I know it's low, but there are some females having almost a dozen offspring and males having 5-6 foals isn't that uncommon. I'd even say the only way they could currently get near 65 is through culling, but I don't know how commonly it's done with zebras. Introducing new genetics via sperm or animals from other continents is of-course also an option, but I don't think this is done very often currently.

So what does this mean. If we are very pessimistic and take 30% and let's say 200 zebra's, that means you have roughly 70 zebra's with offspring. That's quite low to conserve genetics in the long run. So even though it's an unpopular move I'd even be inclined to say the best option is to phase out another subspecies of grant zebra (I'd say burchell due to it's low population size and it's lower conservation value compared to the maneless zebra).


I could of-course be wrong as the margin of error on such rough estimates is considerable. If anyone could confirm or correct some of these numbers that would be great.
 
Are Grévy’s the most common in captivity? And is that due to the fact that zoos want to have a robust insurance population, given their endangered status?
 
When it comes to species Grevy's are number two, when it comes to populations I have no idea for the US but in Europe there are two subspecies of plains zebra more common than the Grevy's.
 
Does anyone keep Selous’s zebra? The internet informs me that it is by far the most endangered of all zebra species and subspecies.
It is, but due to its rarity I wouldn't be surprised if it was kept in some reserves and research centers in its native range, or at least near it. Not sure about public facilities though.
 
I wonder if its the Canyon Colorado Equid Sanctuary in New Mexico you're thinking of? I was actually re-watching the old BBC palaeontology/zoology documentary 'Wild New World' earlier this morning and noticed it mentioned in the credits.

It was certainly owned by a millionaire and had a huge collection of various species of equids - I have seen one reference suggesting 331 onager alone and both Grevy's and Hartmann's mountain zebras. Unfortunately, it seems to have closed some time ago.
I remember reading about this years ago. Wasn't it to establish a population of Grevy's zebras?
 
Ah, yeah there definitely are Chapman's in the US. They would probably be 5th, though.
Interesting, that would give the option for Europe to let the Burchell go and keep the chapman, and for the US to do the reverse. That way they would at least free up spaces in Europe for the Maneless and hartmann mountain zebra. Depending on current population sizes, the Us could then expand their Hartmann program and possibly even bring in another subspecies of either mountain (cape) or plains zebra (selous or crawshawi). The latter would of-course be a difficult matter as those subspecies aren't easy to get. It might just be better for them to stick to 4 populations (grant, burchell, grevy and hartmanni), and probably this is also what will happen in reality as the small chapmani population will become more and more inbred and thus less viable.
 
Ah, yeah there definitely are Chapman's in the US. They would probably be 5th, though.
Do you have any evidence to substantiate your claims about Chapman’s zebras in the United States, or are you just assuming? There is likely Chapman’s blood in the plains zebra population in the States, but it is extremely unlikely there are any purebred animals left. The plains zebra population is largely hybridized— even many “Grant’s” zebras are to some degree hybrids, though there are far more purebred Grant’s left than there are Burchell’s. The plains zebra population is to be phased out of AZA institutions, single species zebra exhibits are to be replaced with Grevy’s and multi-species exhibits are to be replaced with Hartmann’s. In theory there should be space for another purebred population, but I can pretty much guarantee that will not happen. With the changes coming down the pipeline for SSP and related programs within the AZA, we can really only expect decreases in programs and decreases in species.
 
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