Moose have hooves, just like cows and horses do.
Yes, it is different to a cows as cows have one instead of top fron teeth, horses have them between the incisors and the premolars.
Llamas are different to horses because llamas have thick coats of fur, while horses only have a main on their neck. Llamas spit up to 10 feet, while horses do not spit at all. There are shoes for horses, but not for llamas. They are completely different to horses. Llamas are much more closely related to camels than horses, sharing the Family group of Camelidae
Herbivores do not have just ONE kind of foot. For instance many insects are herbivores and they have lots of different kinds of foot. Camels, horses, cows, elephants, geese and ostriches are all herbivores and they all have different kinds of feet.
NO! They have hard hooves like horses or cows.
No. Horses are equids and cows are bovids, which means that they are two very different species. However, horses and cattle are related in the fact that they are both mammals and are both herbivores, and both are hooved animals. But that's where the similarities end.
Cows are easily able to lick enough salt from a block to sustain them long term. Horses lack the ability to lick enough salt from a salt block, so most do better with loose salt. However, the ingredient (salt) in a horse salt vs. a cow salt is the same. Mineral blocks and loose mineral is different for cows and horses. Cows and horses have different mineral needs, but their requirement for salt is similar. Yes. Salt blocks are standard for both cows and horses: there really is no discretion as to whether a particular block is better for horses than cows or vice versa.
Yes, cows and horses have innate and learned behavior.
4 of each. Horses: 28 + 4 = 32 Cows: 36 + 4 = 40 Horses: cows = 32 : 40 = 4 x 8 : 5 x 8 = 4 : 5
50 For the purpose of understanding it lets say for every truck with 7 cows in it, there was a truck with 3 horses in it. There were 35 cows, so 5 trucks (35 divided by 7 as 7 cows take up one truck) so 5 trucks each with 3 horses in them. That is 15 horses, and 35 added to 15 = 50
"Cows are Horses"
Yes. Cows and horses are commonly found on rangelands, especially beef cattle (no, not the "cows" that are in feedlots, but actual beef cows), not so much dairy cattle.