manure and lots of fun and love
Yes. All pets have dander.
A donkey and a horse can mate to produce a mule. Mules are a hybrid species and are usually sterile, meaning they cannot reproduce.
No horse breed is completely hypoallergenic as all horses produce some level of dander, saliva, and urine that can trigger allergic reactions in sensitive individuals. However, some horse breeds, such as the American Curly Horse and the Bashkir Curly, are known to produce less dander and may be better tolerated by some people with allergies.
Yes, cremello horses are rare as they result from a specific combination of genes that produce a light cream coat color, blue eyes, and pink skin. This coloration is less common compared to other coat colors in horses.
A steer is a bull that has been neutered so he cannot produce offspring. In horses, the equivalent is the gelding.
No.
I'm not sure about produce, but if you meant reproduce, they do it in the exact same way as domestic horses.
Yes, horses are heterotropic, they cannot produce their own food.
no
Two Mustangs produce a Mustang
Yes. All pets have dander.
Horses, flax, linen, and slaves-
No, organisms of different species can breed and produce offspring. Donkeys and horses can breed and produce mules but mules cannot produce offspring.
There have been cases of mares having twins, but generally horses only have 1 foal.
Horses, storms, earthquakes, good sailing weather, ...
They have two teets that produce milk. The foal suckles of them.
They produce no more or less other breeds of horses. The average gestation period for horses is 11 month so a mare can have only one foal a year. Some broodmares are bred every year so it is possible for a horse to have 15 to 20 babies over her lifetime.