its eaisier for them & incase they get hurt! :) That is the nature for wild horses. They will travel in herds to not get hurt or because maybe they get lonley. Horses are very smart but need to be with other animals of their own kind.
Since they don't have much to protect themselves on their own, they stay together to fend off predators and to have company. They also must protect the little ones. If they were on their own, they would have a harder time surviving. :)
Wild horses typically live in herds with other horses. They may also share their habitat with other herbivores like deer, elk, and bison. However, wild horses are known to be territorial and may fend off other animals to protect their resources.
the Bedouin kept camels, goats, and sheep in herd :D
Horses are social animals and like company. In the wild state they range in herds.
Yaks typically live in small herds led by a dominant male. They are social animals that rely on the group for protection, foraging, and maintaining social bonds.
Barbed wire fencing.
horses and cattle are known as herds
they hunted for herds of animals
Animals in herds are there because through evolving they have found to stay as a group provides protection for individual animals. Predators will look for the weakest animal in a herd, but when there are many animals the weaker animals have a better chance to survive. When there is an attack from a predator individual animals will fight off the predator to save the weaker animal in the herd.
the animals that live in herds are giraffes,zebras,horses,sheep,cows(cattle),goatsand any other mammals like these
Various animals travel in herds for safety:HorsesCattleBisonBuffaloSheepGoatsDeerAntelopePronghorn AntelopeElk/WapitiElephantsHippopotamusesGnusWarthogsPigs/Hogs
horses and wolves and coyotes
horses.
yes
Since they don't have much to protect themselves on their own, they stay together to fend off predators and to have company. They also must protect the little ones. If they were on their own, they would have a harder time surviving. :)
No, horses are not herds, they are animals, but they do live in herds, and do not hold up well when left without a herd, even if this herd is only 1 other animal.
Some species do, some don't.