Horses, they are more like horses
Zebras and horses are both equids and as such will have the same basic skull structure, including the mouth. Though zebras do tend to fall closer to the overall skull shape of a donkey more so than a horse.
Yes. The animals that have two or more colors padronized like tigers, zebras and giraffes, have its two padronized color to camouflage objectives.
Zebras live a simple life. They graze most of their day. They live in groups. Like all others animals zebras try to get away from their predators. they can live up to a little more than twenty years.
They is are likes a horses, but more closely related to burros and mules.
things like lions and smaller animals such as praire dogs rabbits and other
Elephants, snakes, girraffes, tigers, lions and zebras and lots more
lions, tigers, girrafes, monkeys, elephants, polar bears, zebras, hippos, rhinos, gazelles, cheetahs, leapards, hyenas,flamingos,kangoroos,horses, bison, wolves, penguins, and many, many, many, more!
No, a zebra is part of the horse family, or Family Equidae. Giraffes are in a separate family all their own, Family Giraffidae, and are actually true ruminants like cows, sheep and deer are. Zebras are not ruminants; they are hind-gut fermentors and monogastrics.
From an evolutionary perspective, all mammals are related, so yes, humans and horses or zebras are related, although not closely; humans are much more closely related to the great apes (gorillas, bonobos, chimpanzees, and orangutans). From a creationist perspective, humans and horses are not related.
donkey and horses are parts of the horse family.
Usually zebras, elephants, most tigers, lions, hippopotamus', rhinos, and giraffes. There's a lot more, but those are the basics.
Ligers weren't as much discovered as created. They're a hybrid between lions(from Africa) and tigers(from Asia), In nature there's no way for these two to meet, so they were bred in captivity, in zoos. There was a fad for hybrids like these once, which also led to hybrids between Polar bears and Grizzlys, and horses and zebras. A more recent example is the Bengal cat.