Domestic horses find their food in their feed trough. Horses living in the wild usually live where their can find food meaning places where grass grows.
herbivores, they can get eaten, but dont hunt themselves
Wild stallions are horses, and all horses are herbivores.
The zebra in a food web is 3rd in a food web because, first example there is the sun,then the grass, then the herbavores [vegatarians].Other examples along with the zebra are horses,cows,ZEBRAS, and lots more.
Eyes, nose and tongue help salu to find the food is stale or not
the piranha cannot be at the end of the food chain.
They can usually smell it.
The same way other horses get food: by using their noses to find it and their mouths to eat it.
Horses graze. To "hunt" food actually means to find their prey, stalk/chase and kill it. Horses don't "hunt."
the horses food is brought to them. . .
If a horse is owned by people they get there food from people, at least if you have a horse I hope that's what you do. Anyway, if a horse is wild thy have to find food for themselves.
sea horses wait until their prey is close enough and eats it ;]
Horses generally eat grass which is found on the ground. They will however dig for food and water or strip bark off of trees if they can't find any grass. They will also lick rocks and soil to ingest minerals, salt, and some vitamins.
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
It's pretty easy to find grass to eat on open plains for horses. They roamed about eating grass and drinking water from nearby streams, ponds, rivers, and lakes.
Horses eat grass, they graze.
Horses are herbavores. They eat grass, hay and other plants. They got their food from around them.
Stuffed animal horses, plastic toy horses, horse statues and stuffed dead horses. All other horses that are alive and breathing definitely need water and food.