No. Normally, wild sheep don't grow as thick of coats as domestic sheep, or live in cooler climates, so they don't need to lose their wool. Certain wild sheep do have winter undercoats that they lose, however. Over the years, domestic sheep have been bred to grow very thick coats that must be sheared. There is an experimental chemical that, when ingested by sheep, makes them lose their entire wool coat, thus eliminating the need for shearing, but the chemical is so bad for sheep that it's certainly not worth it.
Please help
because it is from two sheep
No. Sheep are herbivores. They mostly eat grass.
the Marco polo sheep of Afghanistan i believe
You would typically use kilograms or pounds to measure the mass of a sheep.
toads do molt then they eat there molt
They do not and can not molt. "Molt" means to shed hair, pythons have no hair.
They do not and can not molt. "Molt" means to shed hair, pythons have no hair.
They do not molt; they shed.
When pinnipeds molt they
Zero times the ants molt. Ants do not molt.
At night, sheep tend to converge together, in a big wooly orgy. They jump around constantly, as a form of wolf defence. They molt their wool every night, eat it for breakfast, and then regrow their coats come dawn. The word 'sheep' originates from the latin 'quietus huddulus', which means 'quiet huddle' - hence the word 'sheep', which amalgamates 'shhh' and 'heap'. Shhh + heap = Sheep. And now you know.
No, they do not and can not molt. "Molt" means to shed hair, pythons (and moden reptile in general) have no hair.
No. Cows shed in the spring time, not molt. Birds molt, not cows or any other mammal.
Lizards DO molt - just not all at once !
Emil Molt died in 1936.
Emil Molt was born in 1876.