No. All zebras are Black with white stripes.
Both animals belong to the same family. A Zebra has a stripped coat. Horses are not stripped but have plain colors.
the coat can be shiny and multiple different colors, it can be dirty, or rough or soft.
Some horses do. Zebras evolved to blend in to their environment, probably sun and shade. Prehistoric 3 toed horses merged into their background also. The domestic horses that we have today have thousands of years of selective breeding at the whim of humans. We have bred them with the colors that appeal to us. Left to their own devices they would most likely not have the same coat colors that humans like.
They are usually:Rabicano, Roan, Flaxen or Fram overo.
A quarter horses coats color can vary to many different colors, but if you are asking what is like texture wise, the are short straight small haired.
Dark blue in the background, and many different colors on the coat of arms.
There is no exact number of colors because horses exhibit a wide array of coat colors and destinctive markings. none two exactly the same, they may be extremely similar but never the EXACT same.
Well, they are cousins. They both eat grass, they both have a single toe, or hoof, on each foot. They both live in herds, and they both give birth to 1 foal (live twins are 1 in 50,000 for horse and I'm sure similar for zebras). And they both have manes and tails, although they look different. And zebras can be trained, ridden, and driven just like horses, but they are quite difficult to train.
Coat of Many Colors was created on 1971-10-02.
Horses come in many colors and shades, however there are only four base coat colors, Black, Chestnut (red), Bay, and Brown (which is visually somewhat different from bay.)on top of these base colors there are various modifiers including cream, silver, dun, roan, white spotting, pinto patterns, appaloosa patterns, and grey.
Ever wonder what Colors are on the Trysil Kommune Coat Of Arms? The colors of the Trysil Kommune coat of arms are blue, followed by silver, followed by red.
Horses come in many different breeds and a huge variety of colors and patterns. There are three or four different variations of chestnut, bay, grey, roan, palomino, ect. There are dun, grulla and buckskin. These are just a few of the many different colors that horses come in. The genetics to produce some of these coat colors is complicated even for experts. But it is always fun and fascinating to study horse colors.