The Campeiro is a breed of small horse from Brazil. It is thought to descend from horses brought to South America in the sixteenth century. Because it has an ambling gait and comes from the area of the Araucária forests of southern Brazil, it may also be known as the Marchador das Araucárias.
The horses were first seen and reported in 1728 by the exploratory expedition of Francisco de Souza e Faria from the coast of Santa Catarina across the plateau in the direction of the settlement of Curitiba (now the capital of Paraná state). Three years later the horses were again seen, by Cristovão Pereira de Abreu [pt], who captured some hundreds of them.[4]
The Campeiro is a small horse: the average height at the withers is 1.44 metres (14.1 hands; 57 in) and the average weight 420 kilograms (930 lb).[6] The most common color is chestnut, followed by bay and gray.[6]
^ abBreed data sheet: Campeiro/Brazil. Domestic Animal Diversity Information System of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Accessed September 2015.
^ abCaracterísticas (in Portuguese). Curitibanos: Associação Brasileira de Criadores de Cavalo Campeiro. Accessed November 2015.
These are the horse breeds considered in Brazil to be wholly or partly of Brazilian origin. Many have complex or obscure histories, so inclusion here does not necessarily imply that a breed is predominantly or exclusively Brazilian.