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Working animal

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A working animal is a semi-domesticated animal that is kept by humans and often trained to perform various tasks, regardless whether they are also used for consumption of meat and milk or for other products (such as leather).

The history of working animals is as old as agriculture, and possibly longer, some speculate, and has encompassed most aspects of human civilization down to the present day with millions of animals working in symbiotic relationships with their owners around the world, particularly in poorer countries and in agricultural industries. Different types of animals are used around the world depending on the conditions and the specific intended use of the animal. Domesticated species are often bred in several types of breeds suitable for different uses and conditions, in addition to pets, especially horses and working dogs. Working animals are usually raised on farms although some are still captured from the wild - such as some Asian elephants.

Draught animals

A draught animal is an animal used for its physical (i.e. muscular) power, as in transport and haulage, such as pulling carts or sleds, hauling goods, and ploughing plow fields.

Animal-powered transport for movement of people and goods is a major category of working animals. People ride some of the larger of these animals directly as mounts, use them as pack animals to carry goods, or harness one or a team to pull vehicles. Such animals are sometimes known as beasts of burden.

Riding animals or mounts

These carry man himself, which steers in the saddle or bare back, revolutionizing history by increasing human mobility. They include equines such as horses, ponies, donkeys, and mules. Further elephants; camels (two humps) and dromedaries (one) are very common in arid areas, including North Africa and the Middle East, and are used for both transportation and haulage. The Bactrian camel, the world's only remaining other camel, is far rarer than the dromedary and inhabits central and East Asia, where it is also used for transportation and haulage. As the practice of using working animals spans millennia it has accrued much folk lore and forms an important connection between religion and agriculture, and is a specific focus of research in agricultural science.

Pack animals

Often these belong to the same species as mounts, though breeds may be specialized (such as pack-horses. Other species are more exclusively used to carry loads, such as llamas in the Andes. Bovines include water buffalo (as distinct from bison), oxen, bullocks, and yaks (the latter adapted to extreme conditions in the Himalayas). Other species include dogs, deer and goats. Carrier pigeons are a type of pack animal which usually transport written information through the air. An introduction to the subject was prepared to stimulate international research and published as 'Introduction to Working Animals' in the 1980s

Harnessed vehicle pull

An intermediate use is to harness them, singly or in teams, to pull (or haul) sleds or wheeled vehicles.

Other draught animals

Animal power is also used to drive various machines and heavy devices that are not mere loads, and for ploughing: especially oxen (often considered the best animals for heavy work, especially where surefootedness is necessary or if wet conditions prevail but they are required in numbers that make them expensive to procure and they are generally hard to raise in more arid climates) and water buffalo (in tropical or very wet subtropical areas, often used in rice-growing). Often the same species as beasts of burden, especially in a tread-mill, e.g. to grind or to pump, but other kinds can also be put to work.

Retrieval and similar largely sensorial tasks

Hunting and fishing animals

As predatory species are naturally equipped to catch prey, this is also an interesting economical use whenever man manages to 'harvest' their prey (if of value to man) and substitute it with cheaper food; the same can also be done either for sport (reviled by many as cruelty to animals), to reduce pest species or to control the population of species that are considered harmful to crops, livestock or the environment.

Man hunt

Mainly hounds are used to find and catch or eliminate human 'prey', such as escaped prisoners, because of their highly developed sense of smell- in human ethical terms this is a different matter, for the predatory animal just another prey.

Other gathering

Rescue

Other uses

The sensorial functions and natural defensive and offensive means (such as fangs and claws) of various species can be used to protect or -mainly in the case of predatory species- to attack humans.
For various tasks (often corresponding to civilian uses) in military and similar context, see Military animals

Human labour

In both historical and modern times, humans have not only toiled 'like beasts' but have often been exploited against their wills as working animals, as in slavery. In fact, such workers are frequently subject to physical punishment (generally considered inhuman and degrading) if their productivity is not deemed satisfactory, either as a punishment (see penal labor) or in an institutional, sometimes legally rightless state as slave in the broad sense of the term. For example, the Roman galley slave was often deliberately treated more cruelly than any beast of burden #redirect .

Although human labour may be similar or identical to that done by animals, it is usually considered a reproach or insult to equate human work with that of working animals, especially in the case of manual labour.

See also

References

 


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