Typical microscopic hair structure of the family Equidae, which includes horses and donkeys.

Authors

  • Malayaja Author
  • Himanshu Author

Keywords:

hair, , Equinus asinus, Equus caballus, light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, morphometric parameters

Abstract

Animals just cannot survive without hair. The building's design elements make it possible to determine things like
animal species, age, housing circumstances, diet, and even sexual orientation. According to paleontologists, the
hairline remembers certain details about its "owner" even after thousands of years have passed. Research shows
that there are notable variations in the hair coats of the two species studied (Equus caballus and Equus asinus) in
terms of the structure of the brain content and the superficial drawing of the cuticle. Animal species may be
identified by a microscopic analysis of hair that has been bleached, since the structure of the brain matter is easily
recognized. Donkey mane hair's brain material appears as tightly clustered, occasionally interrupted cells, whereas
horse mane hair's brain substance appears as clustered, spherical cells with short spaces between sections of 6-10
cells. Donkey hair represents the brain material, which is made up of cells of varying sizes and shapes that
gradually diminish from the hair's surface as one moves from its center to its tip. Like donkey hair, horse hair has
a similar pattern in its brain substance: cells of the same size begin with a continuous cord at a distance of 1-1.5
mm from the root of the hair, but the gaps between them increase to the complete disappearance of cells as you
move toward the hair's peripheral end. Hair samples were examined under an ultramicroscope to determine the
differences between two species of the same animal genus. The thickness, number of scales (waves), and size of
the scales (wavelength) in donkey and horse mane hair were almost same, but the overall drawing was quite
different. Horse mane cuticles are shown as sharply pointed waves on the surface design, whereas donkey mane
scales are drawn with fringed edges. The covering hair of the horse was thicker than that of the donkey, and the
scales were located and shaped differently. The donkey's outside cuticle is shown as a smooth, continuous wave
of scales, whereas the horse's outer cuticle is depicted as a collection of scales with blurry, ripped edges that form
uneven waves.

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Published

29-08-2018