Aggresive
agresive in mating season
A bird acts nice or mean around animals.Depending on how the other animal is being around the bird.
I wouldn't recommend those two animals getting near each other. Both of them can be hostile to each other when their young are around and they feel they must protect them. And tigers will hunt other animals as prey.
There birds, so they are kinda like flight animals and scared of other animals
Well there is no difference between the ferrets but they get along well with cats and might bite the toes of other animals
Rabbits can be skittish around other animals and may display a range of behaviors including hiding, thumping their hind legs, or even charging if they feel threatened. They are generally social animals and can form friendships with other rabbits or animals if properly introduced and given enough space. It's important to supervise interactions between rabbits and other animals to ensure their safety.
Siberian white tigers are solitary animals and are typically aggressive towards other animals. They tend to be territorial and may exhibit dominance over other species. Introducing them to other animals can result in conflicts or stress for both parties.
They are social animals, and will groom and play with each other.
It really depends on both the horse themselves, the animal itself, and what type of animal said animal is. Horses are known to be friendly around goats, cattle, poultry, dogs, cats, donkeys, mules, pigs, and many other animals.
They do it in a similar way to humans.
British farmers and successive governments have long believed that bovine TB was being spread by badgers and infecting the national dairy herd, and since the 1970s badgers have been culled by gassing (now ceased) and shooting in attempts to prevent this spread. Tests carried out by the Ministry of Agriculture in the early 1970s showed that TB was more common in badgers than in other species. In the first Badger Act (1973), meant that licenses had to be issued for the killing of badgers. However, there are various other theories concerning the transmission of TB to cattle, and badger culling remains a contentious issue in the UK. Research into the specific mechanisms of how cattle contract bovine TB from badgers and into normal levels of transmission when culling is not practised is scanty.
I have seen giraffe in the wild, browsing peacefully near antelopes, zebra and other similar animals.