A horse will eat a few more lbs more than a cow would per day. But this all depends on the size/weight of the horse and what it is being used for. It also depends on the size, breeding and weight of the cow, and what each animal species are fed. A big horse typically will eat more than a small cow; a horse being used for ranching, draft work, etc., will always eat more than a cow of the same body weight.
Yes, it is different to a cows as cows have one instead of top fron teeth, horses have them between the incisors and the premolars.
Yes, cows and horses have innate and learned behavior.
4 of each. Horses: 28 + 4 = 32 Cows: 36 + 4 = 40 Horses: cows = 32 : 40 = 4 x 8 : 5 x 8 = 4 : 5
50 For the purpose of understanding it lets say for every truck with 7 cows in it, there was a truck with 3 horses in it. There were 35 cows, so 5 trucks (35 divided by 7 as 7 cows take up one truck) so 5 trucks each with 3 horses in them. That is 15 horses, and 35 added to 15 = 50
"Cows are Horses"
Yes. Cows and horses are commonly found on rangelands, especially beef cattle (no, not the "cows" that are in feedlots, but actual beef cows), not so much dairy cattle.
Yes.
prehistoris horses r lot's smaller and they have more hooves
Cows feet are different from horses feet because a horses foot is solid across and a cows foot has toes or has a split in the middle.
Cows and horses
51 horses of which there are 3 cows with 2 heads and three legs or since there are no 3 legged cows there are 60 horses
horses only have one stomach... cows have two stomachs...