Grade
Grade yak is a livestock term for a yak that is not registered, has incomplete pedigree information, or does not fit a named breeding program. It is not a separate breed of Bos grunniens and does not automatically mean poor quality. A grade animal may look fully yak, with the long coat, bushy tail, horn set, and compact bovine frame expected of the species, but its ancestry has not been documented to registry standards. Colors can range from native black and dark brown to trim, royal, golden, or white, depending on the herd.
Grade yaks are common in practical herds because they can still produce meat, fiber, pack work, pasture grazing, or calves for a commercial program. The main limitation is predictability: buyers have less assurance about parentage, fertility, mature size, fiber traits, and whether cattle influence is present. They should be managed like other domestic yaks, with secure fencing, forage or hay, minerals, water, careful handling facilities, and shade during hot spells. For seedstock or conservation breeding, documented animals are usually preferred.
Colors: Black, Dark Brown, Golden, Golden Royal, Golden Trim, Imperial Black, Imperial Trim, Native Black, Native Black Trim, Royal, White