grazing
food dont you know that you
Horses primarily find their food in pastures, where they graze on grass and other vegetation. They may also be fed hay, grains, and supplements by their owners as part of their diet. Water is also an essential part of a horse's diet, and they can usually find it in water troughs or buckets provided for them.
yes
Wild horses are omnivorous because all horses eat plants or grains. In the wild, they sometimes cannot find the plants they need to survive and then go after meat. They may sometimes go after their own in the herd, but they only do so unless they are in desperate need of food and energy.
Arabian horses are not wild, they are domestic, so therefore, they get their food from humans.
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.
Horses get their food in the same way, no matter their color or breed. Wild horses graze and domestic horses graze and wait at the feed trough. Color is irrelevant to horses and their stomachs.
A wild horse, just like domestic horses, eat around 3% to 5% of their body weight per day.
well all wild horses live in groups so they all reley on eachother for food and they work together to find food and the foals suck milk from their mother till they are around 1-2years old . xx
grass and Grass is not a big diet. Horses and donkeys do enjoy grazing on the grass but not as a meal unless they are wild. You can give Alfalfa, barley, and other hay products. Remeber that horses(not sure about donkyes) do not like hay. Also for a side food that helpes your horse het weight give them pellets mixed with hot water, perfect for those cold winters!
They kill the tamed, and a few wild but mostly tamed. The tamed horses are killed and made food, when their at their oldest age, but usually just tamed horses.
* Diet in the wild: Soft short grass, and other plants, and fruits that have fallen * Diet in the zoo: Herbivore diet