Man
in the wild they were made to flee from predators
The main predators of wild horses are mountain lions (cougars), wolves, and occasionally bears. Horses are fairly large prey animals, so their predators must also be large, or work in packs, in order to take one down.
In the wild, predators for horses would be determined by their age. Newborns would be prey for wolves. Older horses, especially the elderly, would be prey for the top predators like the cougar.
NO. Just like with all other horses, Mongolian wild horses are prey animals, or herbivorous. They are not predators: predators eat meat or have an omnivorous (plant and meat) diet.
Well, horses in the wild can be fed on by cougars or other predators like that, I s'pose.. lol =]
Horses are prey animals, not predators. They are herbivores.
The same predators that eat wild horses. Cougars, coyote's, wolves, and other predators.
Prey is killed and eaten by predators. Horses are prey, not predators so they have no prey. they eat grass, but that isn't considered prey. You may have been asking what predators do horses have? and the answer to that would include mostly just large cats. In some areas bears may be a problem, and coyotes and wolves can pose a threat to horses also.
horses in the wild are prey, not predators. so the only time horses will die of anything other than natural causes will be when they are killed by predators, other than that the circle of live is just the basic structure
I did a project on wild horses once. Kiger Mustangs to be specific. In 6th grade science, we had to do a report on some wild animal, and I decided on the Kiger Mustang. I had to describe what they ate, their natural predators, how they lived, etc.To be honest, I have never had to do a report on wild horses.
So that they can spot predators soon enough to run away since horses instinct is flight not fight.
Wolves, coyotes and cougars may prey upon Clydesdales and other horses if given a chance. Horses have developed instincts to protect them from predators, such as usually sleeping upright and for short periods than humans.