Palomino is not a breed but a color. Its a color gene that has been present in horses for as long as there have been horses.
North America palominos originally came from the Spanish settlements
Ceveriano García Palominos was born on 1986-07-18.
no palaminos are not endangered. there are many palominos but only a third of a palomino's litter are pure palominos.
The same thing as any other horse. Palominos are a breed/colour of horse. They are herbivores.
Arabians come in most colors, including grey, black, brown, chestnut, and bay. No palominos or pintos.
Nothing, it's just a colour.
Books say that the Palomino is a "color type", not a breed. This is true because Palominos are a mixture of breeds. If you mate 2 Palominos together, you probably will end up with a dunn colored foal.
Palominos are a color registration for horses not a true breed as it occurs due to a dilute gene in a chestnut coat. Palominos live as domesticated horse stock but can also occur in the few herds of wild mustangs still running free.
Sometimes it is true that breeding two palominos will result in a cremello foal. When bred together, two palominos can produce: 25% Cremello 25% Palomino 50% Chestnut
standing up just like other horses fatty
There is a registery for Palominos that require the palomino's coat to be the color of a "Newly minted U.S. Gold Coin" and of course, the mane and tail have to be white. Excessive white is frowned on. White stocking at or below the knee/hock and a blaze is OK, but much more is not wanted. And Palominos have dark skin. Another color, Golden Champagne, is alot like palomino, but they have light, speckled skin, not dark skin like palominos. But horses that are not in the registery can still be called palominos as long as they follow the above rules except for the one about the golden coin. Palominos can be a very light golden color, to a deep, almost bronze color. Palomino horses usually have white manes and tails and are all tan on their bodies
If you mean the horse than it lives between 15-25 yrs.