All horses are vegetarians.
If they are in the wild they have no job but to eat and be happy.
Well this would depend on the horses weight. A horse should be fed 1 % up to 3% of it's body weight. Since a Belgian typically weighs between 1800 and 2200 pounds that means the horse could be fed anything from 18 pounds to 66 pounds of feed. With a draft horse it's best to try and start at about 2.5% of the body weight in feed and then adjust up or down from there as needed.
Well this would depend on the horses weight. A horse should be fed 1 % up to 3% of it's body weight. Since a Belgian typically weighs between 1800 and 2200 pounds that means the horse could be fed anything from 18 pounds to 66 pounds of feed. With a draft horse it's best to try and start at about 2.5% of the body weight in feed and then adjust up or down from there as needed.
Producers that they eat are algae
Primary consumers eat producers (plants).
No. Primary consumers eat producers (green plants).
NO, producers are thing that make their own food like plants and trees.consumers are things like fox who eat them
yes consumers eat producers
Herbivores that eat producers are known as primary consumers. These animals primarily feed on plants, algae, or other photosynthetic organisms as their main source of nutrition. Examples of primary consumers include rabbits, deer, and grasshoppers.
Producers. The producers make the food, then consumers eat it, then secondary consumers eat them, and so on and so fourth.
Carnivores depend on them because herbivores eat the producers and the carnivores eat the herbivores.
A draft horse should eat 1 to 2.5% of it's bodyweight in forage per day (light horses should get 1.5 to 3%.) So an 1800 pound draft horse should get 18 to 45 pounds per day, this equals out to roughly half to a full bale or more of hay per day if those bales are standard 40 pound bales. However this may go up or down according to a horses age, activity level, how easy of a keeper it is, and what time of year it is.