A 'dzo' (
Tibetan མཛོ་ mdzo ''tso'') is a male
hybrid of a
yak and a domesticated
cow. They are larger and stronger than cattle, and are bred for agricultural work in
Nepal and
Mongolia. In
Mongolian it is called 'hainag' (хайнаг). Alternative Tibetan spellings in English include 'zho' and 'zo'. A female offspring is known as a ''dzomo'' or ''zhom''.
In Nepal, yak/cow hybrids are bred using yak bulls on domestic cows or, less often, domestic bulls on yak cows. The female hybrids are fertile, the male ones are sterile and the meat is considered superior to beef. In
Nepali, the hybrid is called a ''khainag'' or the Tibetan ''dzo'' (male) / ''dzomo'' (female). A dzomo crossed with either a domestic bull or yak bull results in an ''ortoom'' (three-quarter-bred) and an ortoom crossed with a domestic bull or yak bull results in a ''usanguzee'' (one-eighth-bred). As a result, many supposedly pure yak or pure cattle probably carry a dash of each other's genetic material, respectively.
There is as well a more or less English-derived name, 'yakow', which is a , an obvious combination of the two words yak and cow.
See also
★
Bovid hybrid
★
Yakalo
External links
★
Yakow on FactMonster
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Yakow on a list of cows