Carabao: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
The '''carabao''' ('''''kalabaw''''' in [[Filipino language|Filipino]]) is a domesticated type of [[water buffalo]] (''Bubalus bubalis'' or sometimes ''B. bubalus carabanesis'') found in the [[Philippines]], [[Guam]], and various parts of Southeast Asia. Carabaos are highly associated with farmers, being the farm animal of choice for pulling the plow and the cart used to haul farm produce to the market. |
The '''carabao''' ('''''kalabaw''''' in [[Filipino language|Filipino]]) is a domesticated type of [[water buffalo]] (''Bubalus bubalis'' or sometimes ''B. bubalus carabanesis'') found in the [[Philippines]], [[Guam]], and various parts of Southeast Asia. Carabaos are highly associated with farmers, being the farm animal of choice for pulling the plow and the cart used to haul farm produce to the market. |
||
== Description == |
|||
Carabao are closely related to the American bison, but they look more like cattle. Adults weigh seven to eight hundred kilograms—almost 2,000 pounds—and have fairly long gray or black hair thinly covering their huge bodies. They have a tuft of hair on their forehead, and at the tip of their tail. Normally, they are silent, but they will give a trembling snort if they are surprised. |
|||
Both males and females have massive horns. Since carabao have no sweat glands, they cool themselves by lying in waterholes or mud during the heat of the day. Mud, caked on to their bodies also protects them from bothersome insects. |
|||
Carabao eat grass and other vegetation, feeding mainly in the cool of the mornings and evenings. In some places of the world carabao are used for milk just like a cow, or they may be slaughtered and eaten. They live to age 18 or 20 and have one calf each year. |
|||
== In the Philippines == |
== In the Philippines == |
||
Line 15: | Line 23: | ||
== In Guam == |
== In Guam == |
||
The carabao is also considered a national symbol of Guam. They were imported into Guam from the Philippines during the Spanish colonial administration of Guam as a beast of burden. They were used for farming and to pull "carabao carts." |
The carabao is also considered a national symbol of Guam. They were imported into Guam from the Philippines in the late 1600s during the Spanish colonial administration of Guam as a beast of burden and as transportation. They were used for farming and to pull "carabao carts." As recently as the early 1960s, carabao races were a popular sport on Guam, especially during fiestas. |
||
Today, carabaos are a part of the popular culture on Guam. A Christmas song called "Jungle Bells", sung to the tune of "[[Jingle Bells]]", makes reference to riding a "carabao cart today" instead of the "one-horse open sleigh" in the traditional song. Carabaos are often brought to carnivals or other festivities on Guam and used as a popular ride for kids. They are also sometimes eaten as a delicacy on Guam, although this is not common these days. |
Today, carabaos are a part of the popular culture on Guam. A Christmas song called "Jungle Bells", sung to the tune of "[[Jingle Bells]]", makes reference to riding a "carabao cart today" instead of the "one-horse open sleigh" in the traditional song. Carabaos are often brought to carnivals or other festivities on Guam and used as a popular ride for kids. They are also sometimes eaten as a delicacy on Guam, although this is not common these days. |
||
While carabaos were fairly common on Guam before the 1900s, today they are rare in most parts of Guam. The exception is in the U.S. Naval Magazine in the village of [[Santa Rita]], where the carabaos were protected from hunters as Naval Magazine is fenced on all sides. The carabao population of Naval Magazine has grown to several hundred, to the point that they have become a pest and cause environmental damage and pollute the Naval water supply in the Fena Resevoir. In 2003, the Navy, in a controversial move that was protested by many [[Chamorro]] people, began a program of extermination to control the carabao population of Naval Magazine. |
While carabaos were fairly common on Guam before the 1900s, with a population numbering in the thousands, today they are rare in most parts of Guam. The exception is in the U.S. Naval Magazine in the village of [[Santa Rita]], where the carabaos were protected from hunters as Naval Magazine is fenced on all sides. The carabao population of Naval Magazine has grown to several hundred, to the point that they have become a pest and cause environmental damage and pollute the Naval water supply in the Fena Resevoir. In 2003, the Navy, in a controversial move that was protested by many [[Chamorro]] people, began a program of extermination to control the carabao population of Naval Magazine. |
||
[[Category:Bovines]] |
[[Category:Bovines]] |
Revision as of 10:04, 16 September 2006
The carabao (kalabaw in Filipino) is a domesticated type of water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis or sometimes B. bubalus carabanesis) found in the Philippines, Guam, and various parts of Southeast Asia. Carabaos are highly associated with farmers, being the farm animal of choice for pulling the plow and the cart used to haul farm produce to the market.
Description
Carabao are closely related to the American bison, but they look more like cattle. Adults weigh seven to eight hundred kilograms—almost 2,000 pounds—and have fairly long gray or black hair thinly covering their huge bodies. They have a tuft of hair on their forehead, and at the tip of their tail. Normally, they are silent, but they will give a trembling snort if they are surprised.
Both males and females have massive horns. Since carabao have no sweat glands, they cool themselves by lying in waterholes or mud during the heat of the day. Mud, caked on to their bodies also protects them from bothersome insects.
Carabao eat grass and other vegetation, feeding mainly in the cool of the mornings and evenings. In some places of the world carabao are used for milk just like a cow, or they may be slaughtered and eaten. They live to age 18 or 20 and have one calf each year.
In the Philippines
Carabaos are indigenous to Southeast Asia; as waves of migration into the Philippines occurred, the carabao were captured and domesticated.
The carabao is considered as a national symbol of the Philippines.
Also, the mascot of the Philippine Daily Inquirer is Guyito, a carabao.
In Guam
The carabao is also considered a national symbol of Guam. They were imported into Guam from the Philippines in the late 1600s during the Spanish colonial administration of Guam as a beast of burden and as transportation. They were used for farming and to pull "carabao carts." As recently as the early 1960s, carabao races were a popular sport on Guam, especially during fiestas.
Today, carabaos are a part of the popular culture on Guam. A Christmas song called "Jungle Bells", sung to the tune of "Jingle Bells", makes reference to riding a "carabao cart today" instead of the "one-horse open sleigh" in the traditional song. Carabaos are often brought to carnivals or other festivities on Guam and used as a popular ride for kids. They are also sometimes eaten as a delicacy on Guam, although this is not common these days.
While carabaos were fairly common on Guam before the 1900s, with a population numbering in the thousands, today they are rare in most parts of Guam. The exception is in the U.S. Naval Magazine in the village of Santa Rita, where the carabaos were protected from hunters as Naval Magazine is fenced on all sides. The carabao population of Naval Magazine has grown to several hundred, to the point that they have become a pest and cause environmental damage and pollute the Naval water supply in the Fena Resevoir. In 2003, the Navy, in a controversial move that was protested by many Chamorro people, began a program of extermination to control the carabao population of Naval Magazine.