Wild horses are found all over the world. However, most feral horses are actually decendents of domesticated horses that escaped in the past. The only truly wild horse is the Przewalski's Horse, which can be found in Mongolia. Other feral horses can be found in the mountains and plains of the western United States, on some islands of the eastern coast of Canada (Sable Island) and the United States (Assateague Island), and in Australia.
"Wild horses" are just feral horses. Is a feral cat the same thing as a cat? Yuuup
A Mustang is a North American horse west that descended from horses brought to the Americas by the Spanish. Mustangs are often referred to as wild horses, but there is intense debate over terminology. Because they are descended from once-domesticated horses, they can be classified as feral horses and are free-roaming horses.
A feral horse is a free-roaming horse of domesticated ancestry. As such, a feral horse is not a wild animal in the sense of an animal without domesticated ancestors. However, some populations of feral horses are managed as wildlife, and these horses often are popularly called "wild" horses. Feral horses are descended from domestic horses that strayed, escaped, or were deliberately released into the wild and remained to survive and reproduce there. Away from humans, over time, these animals' patterns of behavior revert to behavior more closely resembling that of wild horses. Some horses that live in a feral condition but may be occasionally handled or managed by humans, particularly if privately owned, are referred to as "semi-feral."
Percherons are not feral horses.
The term Spanish horse is typically used for Andalusian or Pura Raza Espanola (PRE) horses. This breed is not wild or feral, but there were and are herds of feral/wild Sorraia horses in the Iberian Peninsula.
A mustang is one of the feral horses that inhabit much of America. (It is incorrect to call them wild horses as they are not truly wild; they are the descendants of horses belonging to Spanish settlers which have become feral.) A group of horses is called a herd.
Wild or Feral horses will live in most any place that they can find food, water, and shelter in. This will include open plains, mountains, deserts and even some types of woodlands.
Wild horses are typically small. They range from 12 to up to 15.2 hands, as far as I know. Also horses such as mustangs are not "wild", they are "feral".
Appaloosas are domestic horses and they live where their people keep them. If there are any wild (feral) appaloosas it is just a domestic one that somehow ended up joining a band of mustangs.
That would be a feral horse. The majority of so called 'Wild' horses are actually just feral.
All mustangs are free roaming horses, so in a sense, they are wild, but because they are descendants from domesticated horses that the Spanish brought over they are not wild horses, they are called feral horses.
Within the United States, the only difference between a feral horse and a wild horse is in the legal definition. A feral animal is one in lives in the wild but whose ancestors were once domesticated. By the standard definition of feral, wild horses living on public lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management are just that - feral. However, the Free Roaming Wild Horse and Burro Act of 1971 put them into a classification of their own which deems them simply as wild. Ironically, it's possible for a wild horse to step over the thin blue line only seen on a map and suddenly be considered feral.