Want this question answered?
Be notified when an answer is posted
Chat with our AI personalities
Animals such as rabbits, kangaroos, and sheep are known to eat tussock grass. These animals graze on the tufted grasses which make up tussocks, deriving nutrition and sustenance from them.
Cow's graze on grass to feed as they can easily digest grass.
If 40 cows can graze the pasture for 40 days and 30 cows can graze it for 60 days, this means each cow eats 1/40 of the grass per day in the first scenario and 1/60 of the grass per day in the second scenario. To find out how long 20 cows would take to graze the pasture, we calculate that they would consume 1/40 * 20 = 0.5 of the grass per day. Therefore, the pasture would last for 80 days if 20 cows were to graze on it.
Lions actually do not graze. They are carnivorous mammals, meaning they eat other animals--preferably grazers--to survive.
Hooves contain a hard outer covering that helps protect the animal's feet from sharp objects on the ground, such as rocks or thorns, while they graze. Hooves also provide stability and traction for animals as they move across various terrains. Ultimately, this adaptation allows grass-eating animals to thrive in their environments by minimizing the risk of injury to their feet.
Well grazing animals are any animals that "Graze" in open fields. Typicality eating grass and other ground leaves.
a grazing are is an area of grass where animals(cows, horses, ect) graze (eat grass)
a dryish land with lots of grass and plenty of sun
A grassland for animals to feed on is called a pasture or grazing land. It provides a natural area where animals can graze on grass and other vegetation.
this particular plant evolved the pricles to protect it from animals that graze.
So they don't starve.
Graze.
Go let the cow graze in the grass.
An Oasis is a fertile or green area in an arid region (as a desert) and are crucial to providing grass for animals to graze in.
Grazed is the past tense form of the verb "graze".Graze means to feed with grass.
Horses and cows are herbivores that graze on grass.
Animals such as rabbits, kangaroos, and sheep are known to eat tussock grass. These animals graze on the tufted grasses which make up tussocks, deriving nutrition and sustenance from them.