A zebra often will have only one foal per year, rarely two per year.
Of course they do! How would the zebra species still be 'alive' if the adult zebras didn't have baby zebras. Of course they have babies.
Zebras may attack baby zebras to establish dominance, protect their territory, or in response to stress or fear.
no, baby zebras cannot jump they develop that feature later on
Male zebras may attack baby zebras to establish dominance, protect their territory, or eliminate competition for mating opportunities within the herd.
Baby zebras stay protected by herds and their parents some survive but some don't
Zebras are herbivore plant eaters. The don't eat meat regardless of where it's from.
Baby zebras are like adult zebras. Although they are small, they have all the stipes they will ever have, as the youngster grows, the stripes grow. (Zebras are white with black stripes; if you look at their bellies, the black ends and it's white).
Yes they are!
Baby zebras stay protected by herds and their parents some survive but some don't
foal or a coalt
By pattern of stripping
Zebras exhibit infanticidal behavior towards baby zebras as a way to increase their own chances of survival and reproduction. By eliminating competition from other young zebras, the adult zebra can ensure that its own offspring have better access to resources and are more likely to survive and pass on their genes.