The Mustangs live in the Western United States and with a population of about 35,500 horses about 2/3 of those live in the state of Nevada. They have been seen in southern Montana, and even a sighting (rare though it is) over the boarder in California, and even a small band or two near Idaho. States that boarder Nevada have more Mustangs than more remote states.
Google information about wild mustangs
Of corse not!! Wild mustangs are only found in the United States. Althouth wild mustangs came from Canada the Government moved them all to America because the mustangs were eating all the food that was grown.
In the wild.
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".
A mustang is a wild horse. They are short and stocky. They range about 14 hands tall.
They grow to be about 13.25 to 15 hands at the withers. A hand is about 4 inches
We can make reservations for the mustangs or make it against the law to kill the mustangs.
most mustangs are not domesticated but some may be.
Yes, "Range" can be a verb. "The wild mustangs would range from the Rocky Mountains to the Missouri River." "Range" can also be a noun. "Mom put some water on the range to heat up."
There are assumptions in this question which are not explicitly stated. These are that mustangs do not live in cold climates or that they prefer warmer climates and are both false. Mustangs have a range of temperatures and dryness levels that they can tolerate and exist in. Some areas in that range are relatively hotter than others. (Texas is certainly hotter than Minnesota, but mustangs can be found in both Texas and Minnesota.)
No, Mustangs are just wild horses.
their wild and active