No
No while they both have hoofs they are not related
Fur, antlears, legs, hoofs, head, body, eyes, ears
A cloven hoof is a hoof that is split in the middle, like a cow, deer or a hog's hoof. An example of a unclovened hoof is a horses hoof, it is not split in the middle. If you read the Bible/Quran it says to only eat cloven hoofed animals, it is a sin to eat one that is unclovened.
Zebra, dik-dik, gazelle, Pronghorn, sheep, llama, goats, alpaca, camel, cow, horse, Donkey, Pig, Boar, ram, Wildebeast, moose, buffalo, Antelope, Goats, bison, Deer, giraffe, Impala, Gaur, Buffalo, Moose, Caribou
Hoofed, or hooved (both are correct) is an adjective describing those animals that have hooves (hoofs), horn-like growths encasing the toes or entire foot. Such animals include cattle, pigs, deer, elk, goats, sheep and many others.
Unlikely, unless the deer is wounded. Rat poison is an anticoagulant, and can only kill if the animal begins bleeding due to cuts or other injuries. Rat poison works on rats because they fight frequently and once injured the poison causes them to uncontrollably bleed to death.
Bongos have hoofs because they do.
yes deer can eat posion ivy. Actually, if you want to poison deer and keep your garden green and not stripped clean of new growth, fruit, and the mellons you have planted. do this; buy some deer corn and grind it into "cracked corn" then add some ground up CASTOR BEANS to the feed. Castor Beans Retcin are poisonious--even the leaves are toxic. Depending on the size of the animal, it may take a week before you start seeing stumbling and slow moving deer. the larger the animal, the more it takes----they keep on eating the stuff tho--deer are not the brightest animals in the forrest. Smaller deer, fawns and up to six months will usually drop by the roadside within days. Keep your fruit away from the toxic castor plants and you will have a protected garden!!
No, cougars have paws with claws. They do hot have hoofs.
Because that's the way it is!
Galloping Hoofs was created on 1924-12-21.
No, they don't. Some animals like deer, horses, cows, goats and beetles can eat poison ivy. But if you have a pet cat or dog that was around poison ivy, you could get it from them. You should bathe your pet if it rolled in or touched poison ivy.