Actually, there are three classifications of horses. Hot-bloods, warmbloods, and cold-bloods. Warmbloods are breeds, such as the Danish and Dutch warmbloods, and Oldenburgs or Holsteiners are types of warmbloods as well. However, Thoroughbreds, Arabians, Barbs, Morgans, and Ahkal-Tekes are considered hot-blooded, and also they are more high strung. There are others, but this is just a generalized list. Hot-blooded horses are usually smaller, and weigh less than a warmblood or cold-blood. Cold-blooded horses are usually draft breeds; big boned and strong, and often taller than hot-bloods. these three classifications are used for different equine sports as well; hot-bloods, such as Arabians and Thoroughbreds, are mainly used for racing, though you so see a lot of crossover of Thoroughbreds into hunter-jumper, which also includes a lot of warmbloods. You don't see a lot of Arabians or Clydesdales in hunter jumper. On my hunter jumper circuit, there's two Morgans, one of which is the one I ride, an Arabian, and a Percheron cross, and that's about it. Cold-bloods are used mostly for pulling, such as heavy farm work and hauling. Cold-bloods tend to be more laid back, and weigh a couple hundred pounds more, and average a few hands taller than warm- or hot-bloods.
So yes, there is a difference. Those "cart horses" are cold-bloods, the "racehorses" hot-bloods, and the jumping horses tend to be either Thoroughbreds or warmbloods.
endothermic because they aren't cold blooded their warm blooded
Warm blooded. All birds are warm blooded.
Warmblooded. Alpacas are mammals, and mammals are warm-blooded.
warm blooded
cold blooded
they are cold-blooded
as in warm blooded or cold blooded, a horse is a mammal which means they are warm blooded.
All horses are warm blooded.
Arabians are hotblood horses, not coldblood's or warmblood's.
since a horse is a mammal, and all mammals are warm-blooded, a horse is warm-blooded. Lizards, for example, are cold-blooded, that's why they lay in the sun all day. to warm up their body temperature.
They are, as are most of the large draft breeds.
Cold blooded.
are catfish cold blooded or warm blooded
Cold Blooded
In the zoologic/biologic sense, all horses are warm-blooded or endothermic. However, horse owners have historically recognized three types of horses: "hot blooded", "warm blooded" and "cold blooded" based upon the old system of equating the heat of the blood with temperament. A "hot blooded" horse was an excitable and active horse breed such as Arabians and Barbs. A "cold blooded" horse was a solid, quiet horse breed such as Friesans, Clydesdales and other draft-horse breeds. A "warm blooded" horse was the offspring of a cross between a "hot blooded" and a "cold blooded" horse, and was developed as the favored mount of a knight in armor as these horses had the size and stamina to carry an armored knight but picked up some of the speed and flexibility of the Arabian crossed into them. Currently, "warm blooded" horses account for most breeds in the world, ranging from the American Quarter Horse to the Thoroughbred. However, there is also a specific breed of horse called the Warmblood.
badgers are cold blooded
They are mammals so they are warm-blooded.