Why wasn't the zebra domesticated?

Right now I can think of a few difficulties in catching even a young zebra on the African plains: they keep moving in groups, often ahead of a huge herd of wildebeest, there are often lions around. But the same conditions were likely present in the Eurasian plains where the horse was domesticated. And when you do catch one, how hard is it to break/train?

Zebras are inherently more skittish than wild horses - so much so that it’s not worth taming them. I don’t know if that’s because they have more predators? IIRC they also have more complex dietary requirements.

Wolves don’t make good pets, and yet there are dogs.

I think the answer to this is because it just didn’t happen. Who’s to say that zebras couldn’t have been bred out of their “skittishness” over many, many generations.

it was tried. they kept trying to escape. people should have expected that.

People have certainly attempted to tame zebras, and a few have been trained to pull carts or wagons. There may have been a few trained to saddle and bridle but if so they were zebras of rare temperment. Zebras as a general rule are more skittish, aggressive, and prone to attack humans than horses are, even feral horses.

Zebras spent millions of years in Africa beside proto-humans and humans, which would have regarded zebras as food rather than transportation. Horses evolved outside of Africa and may have less instinctive fear of humans. WAG there, but it’s a possible factor.

Crosses of zebras with horses or donkeys have been useful as domestic animals but, like crosses between horses and donkeys, they are infertile

Couldn’t breed them in captivity: couldn’t get their damn pajamas off!

A man and his pet zebra walk into a bar. It’s about 5pm, but they’re ready for a good night of drinking. They start off slowly, watching TV, drinking beer, eating peanuts. As the night goes on they move to mixed drinks, and then shooters, one after the other. Finally, the bartender says: “Last call.” So the man says, “One more for me … and one more for my zebra.” The bartender sets them up and they shoot them back. Suddenly, the zebra falls over dead. The man throws some money on the bar, puts on his coat and starts to leave. The bartender, yells: “Hey buddy, you can’t just leave that lyin’ there.” To which the man replies: “That’s not a lion, that’s a zebra.”

http://www.pbs.org/gunsgermssteel/variables/zebra.html

In the news around here recently: Zebra attacks keeper at National Zoo; spooked gazelle breaks neck and dies amid panic - Washington Times

Zebras are meaner than horses. Its not just that they spook, it’s that they don’t necessarily run. Zebras have been known to kick a lion to death.

Not finding that too persuasive. Man, that is H. sapiens, only existed in Africa for 200,000 years. Yes, our ancestors evolved in African, but those ancestors, or similar species, existed outside Africa as well. As did plenty of deadly predators.

I understand that they are also nastier biters than horses. They not only bite, but they often hang on and keep biting unlike a horse.

Yup, they’re pretty much vicious stripy bastards. I knew a gentleman who breeds zedonks and zorses, and he never kept the zebra parent around beyond the mating. And this is a guy who ran a well-known animal sanctuary with a LOT of animals other folks wouldn’t mess with.

The Asian wild ass (Equus hemionus) was never domesticated either.

Well, that’s a zebra of a different color!

Perhaps they could have, but when you have other, easier to tame species, why would you bother?

There weren’t any other, easier to tame species in zebra country. In other areas of the world, yes, but not where zebras were prevalent.

My nephews wife came from a ranch where they raise zebras on the cental coast n Ca. They get along well with the other live stock and they do cross them I believe. I will inquire as to wether or not they are breeding for a tameness.

Why don’t you find it persuasive? Obviously, some animals are easier to domesticate then others. Isn’t it possible that the characteristics of zebras just so happened to make them not worth the effort of domesticating? Perhaps if Eurasian horses were a little more ill tempered, they never would have been domesticated at all.

Here is an article about a teenaged girl who bought and trained her own zebra. (It worked, more or less, but it sounds like a lot of work for relatively little payoff.)

Did you read the link? The proposal was that zebras were less domesticatable because they evolved alongside humans:

While it’s true that our species evolved in Africa, the other species of Homo that existed in Africa also existed in Europe and Asia for close to 2M years, and our species only showed up in Africa about 200,000 years ago. So, large animals evolved alongside man in Africa, Europe and Asia for millions of years. Other large predators also existed outside Africa-- in fact, pretty much the whole panoply of large cats not to mention wolves and bears.

Besides, we don’t have evidence that humans domesticated horses on purpose. More likely the domestication happened over a long period of time and through a process that both species found mutually beneficial, but which neither consciously chose.