gaerzi wrote: ↑Wed Sep 07, 2022 12:01 am
Yeah but when you're a fantasy species with telepathic powers, you can probably waive some of these requirements with a few Jedi mind tricks.
Like I could easily imagine that during their more primitive stages, the loroi could have had a "beast tamer" caste dedicated to exploiting wild animals as beasts of burden, mounts, or whatever. Perhaps without the animal husbandry side, though -- after all if you rely on psionic powers to control the animal, you're not really taming it and teaching it tricks. You can release it when you're done and catch another one the next time you need one.
Fair point -- and that's essentially what the Perrein wormhandlers are. However, sori aren't large enough to ride or pull drafts. They were used for various utility purposes, like bloodhounds or truffle hogs.
In the "present," with access to dozens of worlds with native life, there's now a wide variety of potentially domesticate-able animals, but by the time you develop starflight, you don't have a lot of need for pack animals.
gaerzi wrote: ↑Wed Sep 07, 2022 12:01 am
Arioch wrote: ↑Mon Sep 05, 2022 9:04 pm
An example that's often brought up is the question of why zebras were never domesticated in Africa, even though they're very closely related to horses; there are probably multiple reasons, but the most obvious one is that they're extremely skittish, ornery animals.
So are horses. The main reason zebras weren't domesticated is that we had domesticated the horse first. Some people have actually tamed zebras, but by and large since they did not have had the thousands of generations of selective breeding with humans empirically attempting to create a race more useful to them, the only reason one could have to want to ride a zebra instead of a horse is eccentricity or a love of challenge.
Sub-Saharan Africa didn't have horses until the industrial age. One of the most compelling explanations for why places like southern Africa lagged so far behind Europe and Asia is that they didn't have access to the same animal and plant resources, horses being an important one.
From what I understand, Neolithic Eurasian nomads herded horses primarily for food alongside cattle and sheep for a long time before they learned to ride them, and I think it's quite likely that selective breeding over that time helped make that possible. But as far as I'm aware, no African tribes were able to do the same with zebras, and you can't selectively breed animals if they won't breed for you, so you have to be able to get to the first stage before you can move farther down the road to domestication. There's a big difference between having a pet zebra and having a captive breeding population of zebras.