Because brumbies are introduced to Australia, they are regarded as little more than feral horses. As such, they do not have a conservation status, and cannot be endangered.
Incidentally, there are plenty of them left, and they are not likely to be even unofficially endangered anytime soon.
grass,pland and shrubs
The collective nouns for brumbies are a herd of brumbies, a band of brumbies or a mob of brumbies.
The collective nouns for 'brumbies' are a band of brumbies or a mob of brumbies.
The possessive form of the plural noun 'brumbies' is brumbies'.Example: We heard the brumbies' hoof-beats before we saw them.
Brumbies affect a variety of burrowing animals and native herbivores. As brumbies eat the native vegetation, this impacts on the food sources of native herbivores such as wombats. Brumbies also affect burrowing amass such as bilbies and marsupial moles, as their hooves impact the ground, sometimes causing burrows to cave in, and sometimes making it too difficult for naive animals to dig.
Brumbies was created in 1996.
A group of brumbies is called a herd. Brumbies are feral horses that are found in Australia.
There are at least a 135 endangered Australian plants. Go to (Wikipedia.org/wiki/list_of_threatened_flora_of_Australia) for a complete list.
The term 'brumby' is only used in Australia. It refers to all Australian wild or feral horses.
From Humans
native grasses and frogs are endangered species in wetlands
Any Australian animals which live in the bush can be endangered by bushfires.Animals most at risk include:koalaspossums (especially the Leadbeater's Possum)glidersnumbats (far southwestern Australia only)quollswombats