Same as domestic horses; teeth developed to chomp down on and chew grass.
Horses living in the wild have their own ways to get what they need. Such as they have been observed eating a certain type of clay which rids them of internal parasites. Domestic horses eat differently then their wild cousins. Their teeth aren't worn off like wild horses so they need the help of a vet.
it was made so they could eat grass in the wild
The possessive form for "the teeth of the horse" (singular) is "the horse's teeth".The possessive form for "the teeth of the horses" (plural) is "the horses' teeth".
Having your horses teeth taken care of is called having the horses teeth floated.
Horses have constant growing teeth. They need to get them filed down by an equine dentist every month or so. The horses in the wild, of course, can't get them filed, but their teeth naturally stay small because of the continuous eating and chewing of things.
Some wild horses are tamed as people re introduce them into the wild as other wild horses just are free
Who's Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses was created in 1991.
yes there are. there are wild horses everywhere.
Horses lose their deciduous or "baby" teeth. When horses are born they already have their secondary set of teeth underneath their "baby teeth" just as humans do. The permanent set of teeth will grow in and push the primary set of teeth out.
Wild horses wear their teeth down the same way normal horses do... by eating! Just like captive horses, when they eat grass (or hay for normal horses) they chew the food by grinding their teeth. This grinding causes their teeth to wear down.
wild horses are called "mustangs" and yes, they a re wild
They wouldn't be wild horses then.