Scientific
ClassificationHistory and Distribution
Physical
Characteristics
Senses
Behavior
Diet
and Eating Habitats
Birth
and Care of Young
Longevity and Causes of
Death
The
Anheuser-Busch Clydesdale Teams
Bibliography
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- A. Size
- A horse is measured from the ground to the withers (the tip of its
shoulders), in units called hands (one hand equals 4 in. or 10.2 cm).
- Male adult Clydesdales measure 17 to 19 hands (5.7 - 6.3
ft. or 1.7 - 1.9 m).
- Female adults measure 16 to 18 hands (5.3 - 5.7
ft. or 1.6 - 1.7m).
- A males average weight is between 1,700 and 2,200 lb. (771 - 998
kg).
- A females average weight is between 1,500 and 2,000 lb. (680
- 771 kg).
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- B. Body Shape
- A horses body is adapted for speed. Other animals, such as
antelope, are as fast as the horse, but not nearly as large.

- The Clydesdale is an immensely strong, barrel-chested horse. It was
originally bred for hauling coal and doing farm work.
C.
Coloration
- The most common Clydesdale colors are bay (a deep mahogany brown)
and brown, though some are gray and black. White markings on the face, legs, and sometimes
on the body are typical of this breed.
D. Limbs
- Horses are cursorial (adapted for running). Theyre adapted to
a mobile open-country existence.
- Specializations of the leg and foot enable these animals to be swift and strong runners.
a. In the forelegs, the ulna is reduced in size so
that all the weight is carried by the radius. The radius and ulna are fused.
b. In the hindlegs, the fibula is reduced in size so
that all the weight is supported by the tibia. The tibia and fibula are fused.
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E. Hoofs
- In odd-toed hoofed mammals, the bodys weight is borne on the
central or third digit (toe). The main axis of the foot passes through the third digit,
which is the longest on all four feet.
- In all horses, only the third digit of each foot is functional. The
remaining digits are vestigial (rudimentary and nonfunctioning).
- The horses foot is completely surrounded by keratin (a tough,
fibrous protein which also composes a humans fingernail) to protect it from the
terrain.
- Horses walk on their hoofs, not on the soles of their feet.
- A horseshoe for a full-grown Clydesdale measures more that 22
in. (51 cm) from end to end and weighs about five lb. (2.3
kg). Its more than two times as long and four times as heavy as a shoe worn
by a riding horse.
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| Shoes can be attached to the
hoof to provide added support and traction. |
To shoe a horse, excess hoof growth is trimmed away
and then the shoe is attached to the hoof by eight nails, each 3 to 4 in. (8
- 10 cm) in length.
a. Shoes for the hind feet have tips that curve out
for additional support and traction, since these feet bear the heaviest load when hauling.
b. Shoes are reset every six weeks.
F. Head
- The skull has a relatively elongated muzzle, providing space for
the teeth.
- The eyes are well above ground level while the horse is grazing.
This provides the horse with greater area of vision to look out for impending danger.
- The ears are exceptionally mobile and can be erected and directed
at will toward a sound.
G. Body
covering
- Horses have two types of hair: the fine and comparatively short
hair of the coat, and the coarser and longer hair known as horsehair. The horsehair forms
the forelock (hair on forehead), mane, tail, tuft of hair at the back of the fetlock (the
lower part of the leg) and the feather (the long white hair found on the Clydesdales
ankle).
- Long, coarse bristles about the muzzle and eyes of a horse are
generously supplied with nerves and act as delicate organs of touch.
- A mane covers the neck, and in the domestic horse it falls to the
side. On the only species of wild horse, the Przewalskis horse, it stands erect.
H.
Circulatory system
The body temperature of the Clydesdale is 101 degrees
Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius).
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