Colic or founder. Depending on the symptoms.
In horse isles case the answer is founder.
Sage grass can be extremely harmful to horses. The plant will cause an intoxicating effect, which makes the horse prone to falling over and/or acting strangely. If a horse eats too much or is forced to eat sage grass exclusively, it may become poisoned and die.
A person who eats too much is commonly referred to as a "glutton" or "overeater."
The amount of grass a goat eats really depends on the breed. A Pygmy goat will eat up to 1/2 a pound of grass a day. A fainting goat eats only about 0.1 pounds of grass. So if you want a goat to mow your lawn for A Pygmy goat is the best.
The best grass for horses in a paddock is typically a mix of cool-season grasses like orchard grass or timothy. These grasses are nutritious, palatable, and safe for most horses to graze on throughout the day. It's essential to manage the pasture to prevent overgrazing and ensure there is enough grass available for the horses.
depends on how much it eats :)
If his feet are not in a good healthy form with the coffin bone parrellel to the ground, he may develop founder/laminitis.
This horse may founder and need medical attention and will get fat=)
How much grain a horse eats depends on how much work it is doing. Horses that do not do any work usually don't need any grain, just hay and grass. Some horses that are hard to keep weight on need grain, even if they don't do much work.
chickens, turkeys, geese, pretty much any bird
Assuming you mean the obsolete mass unit rather than a grass seed. one grain is 64.799 milligrams.
Horses eat a lot of food including wheat and grass.
chickens, turkeys, geese, pretty much any bird
That all depends on what she is eating. She won't die if she eats too much hay or grass because she can never eat too much hay or grass. However, she could die if her grass/hay diet was switched suddenly to grain or if she ate too much grain. A sudden switch in diet will upset the pH level in her rumen causing a much higher production of acid than necessary. This is called acidosis, and can kill quickly if the condition isn't caught soon enough. Eating too much grain can also cause her to bloat, which, if not treated with mineral oil or, for severe cases, a trocar to the rumen wall, will cause asphyxiation due to the enlargement of the rumen on the lungs and eventually death.
Bison that are raised on a ranch are fed hay and grain. However, bison in the wild eat primarily grass, not much else.
A grain crop. Wheat is actually a type of grass, though a much different species than that you use for your lawn.
A lot but it is a herbivore so most of the time it eats grass/flowwers
unlike grass, you cannot attain euphoria by eating chocolate. Like grass, you have to roll it in a joint and smoke it.