it all depends on color genetics
Black is a color and not a breed. Appaloosa horses can be black.
Buckskin is a color not a breed. There are buckskin Quarter Horses, Paints, ect. So the color of the horse has nothing to do with what they are used for.
The Pinto breed is a color breed and is known for its spots. Paint Horses are also known for their spots, but Paints are Quarter Horses with spotted markings. A Pinto is any other breed with spots.
No, black is a more uncommon color for the breed.
No paints have won the Kentucky Derby. It is only for purebred Thoroughbreds and that breed cannot be paints. Paint is a breed, pinto is a color, and Thoroughbreds can only be solid colors, no pinto.
You would breed a chestnut to a black, or if you wanted a bay paint, black paint to a black
Pinto is a color not a breed and they are not confined to specific areas. American Paints can be double registered as pintos with both the tobiano and overo color patterns accepted. Pintos can be any breed of horse as long as they meet the color requirements.
It depends. The breed of the horses involved, which coats are dominant in the breed, and wether or not the horses are purebred. For example, if you breed a purebred black horse to a pure brown Thoroughbred mare, then the foal will be black because black is dominant in the breed. However, this rule of coat domination is only true if the horses are purebreds.
paints are the sames as all horses. The question does not make sense. Wild horses eat just like other wild herbavores. They graze on grass and plants. As far as I know there are no "wild" paints. The paint horse is actually a specific breed. Derived from the American Quarter Horse and selected Thourobred. They had too much white on their coats so could not be registered as Quarter Horses. The American Paint Registry began around 1965 to provide a registry for these "too white" Quarter Horses. Wild horse herds have "pintos" which are horses that have the same patterns as the Paint horse breed but they can be any other breed or combinations of breeds. I believe American Mustang is now considered a breed but these horses can't be registered Paints because they did not come from Quarter Horses or Thoughobreds. Simply put, Paints are a breed, pinto is a color or color pattern.
Pinto is a color not a breed. A pinto colored horse can therefore have almost any kind of behaviors.
Palomino is not a breed. Palomino is a COLOR. Just like paint horses are not a breed, they are a COLOR. Palomino can be found in most but not all breeds of horses.
The basic colors are black, chestnut, bay, brown. The modifications would be; palomino, buckskin, smokey black, cremello, perlino, dun, champagne, appaloosas, paints, roans, etc...