Herbivores do.
In case you don't know, and herbivore is an animal that eats solely plants. Many herbivores graze, including kangaroos, sheep, goats, deer, capybaras, and elephants.
And FYI, you mean "which animals graze?", not "what."
Pasturage (modern spelling pâturage or paturage) is a meadow or prairie, a open field where the grass grows and where animals graze it.
Animals that live in the prairie like prairie dogs (Meerkats) lions etc
flatgrass lands
The field is your farm. So you let your animals out and they will just graze on the land around your crops.
To keep the land for animals to graze
No. Cheetahs are predators so they hunt the animals that graze. Grazers are mainly herbivores such as antelope, zebra and wildebeest.
Lions actually do not graze. They are carnivorous mammals, meaning they eat other animals--preferably grazers--to survive.
Lions actually do not graze. They are carnivorous mammals, meaning they eat other animals--preferably grazers--to survive.
Some common prairie animals include bison, prairie dogs, coyotes, and various types of grassland birds such as meadowlarks and hawks. These animals have adapted to the wide open grasslands and are important components of the prairie ecosystem.
In paddocks and fields on farms.
Oh, dude, if you're looking for prairie animals online, you might wanna type in stuff like "prairie wildlife," "animals on the prairie," or maybe even "cute critters roaming the grasslands." But like, be prepared for a bunch of pictures of bison, prairie dogs, and maybe even some sneaky coyotes trying to photobomb the search results. Just keep it chill and enjoy the virtual safari, man.
the indians used the resources they had such a the prairie and the animals on it. the europeans plowed most of the prairie and didn't use what they had