Kunekune | |
Image Alt: | Kunekune |
Status: | Rare |
Country: | New Zealand |
The Kunekune (in Maori pronounced as /kʉnɛkʉnɛ/)[1] is a small breed of domestic pig from New Zealand. Kunekune are hairy with a rotund build, and may bear wattles hanging from their lower jaws. Their colour ranges from black and white, to ginger, cream, gold-tip, black, brown, and tricoloured. They have a docile, friendly nature.[2]
The breed is believed to have descended from an Asian domestic breed introduced to New Zealand in the early 19th century by whalers or traders. They differ markedly from the feral pig of European origin known in New Zealand as a "Captain Cooker".[3] The native Māori people of New Zealand adopted Kunekune; kunekune is a Māori word meaning "fat and round".[4]
By the 1980s, only an estimated 50 purebred Kunekune remained. Michael Willis and John Simister, wildlife park owners, started a breeding recovery programme, which encouraged other recovery efforts., the breed no longer faces extinction, with breed societies in both New Zealand and the United Kingdom. In 1993, two were imported into the United States from the UK.[5]
In 2017, a report of Science Daily said the Kunekune has remarkable social learning with "astonishingly good memory".[6]
The Kunekune can sustain itself by feeding in summer on nothing other than grass.[7]
The Kunekune is covered in hair which can be long or short, and straight or curly. Hair colours include black, brown, ginger, gold, cream, and spotted combinations. It has a medium to short, slightly upturned snout, often black, and either semilopped or pricked ears. It has a short, round body with short legs and may have two wattles (called piri piri) under its chin. The Kunekune stands about tall. An adult Kunekune can weigh between, males being considerably heavier than females.[8] thumb|Ginger Kunekune pig with short hair
Kunekune can be kept as pets in New Zealand and are a recognised breed of miniature pig.
Kunekune cannot be imported into Australia, as Australia does not allow the import of live pigs for biosecurity reasons.[9] However, breeders have created an alternative Australian breed: the Australian miniature pig.[10]