No, they are not. The nuts that are called chestnuts are poisonous to horses and ponies though.
No. Just for humans to eat.
The outer husks of the horse chestnut fruit are poisonous. There are also reported cases of poisoning from eating raw horse chestnuts.
Chestnuts are not poisonous to dogs. However, the horse chestnut also known as buckeyes are toxic to dogs and other animals.
The black horse's genetics is either aaEe or aaEE. If the Black horse is aaEE the foal cannot be chestnut. If the black horse is aaEe there is a 50% chance of the foal being chestnut. The possible colors for any non chestnut foal will be based on the genetics of the chestnut horse at the Agouti site. if the chestnut horse is aa any non chestnut foal will be black if the chestnut horse is Aa there is a 50% chance of a bay foal and a 50% chance of a black foal. if the chestnut horse is AA any non-chestnut foal will be bay.
The buckeye is also called a horse chestnut, red chestnut, or white chestnut. It is the state tree of Ohio and people from that state are called Buckeyes. Native Americans used chestnuts to stun fish because the seeds are poisonous.
Horse chestnut, or chestnut horse translated to Hindi is ban khaur, or hars chesTanaT. It is the nutlike seed of a tree.
It is the horse chestnut that produces conkers.
The Horse Chestnut is an Angiosperm.
A horse chestnut tree!
Horse-chestnut leaf miner was created in 1986.
Conkers come from the horse chestnut.
Rats are not poisonous.
Chestnut is a color and doesn't mean anything really in regards to what a horse does or doesn't do. A chestnut colored horse can do anything a horse of any other color can do.