People usually do this just to have a zorse because the idea of a zorse is cool. Some people so ride them.
1 answer
Zorse -- SqueakyBeeps HI2 :)
2 answers
The cost of a zorse can vary depending on factors such as age, training, and pedigree. On average, a zorse can range from a few thousand dollars to tens of thousands of dollars. Additionally, the cost of maintaining a zorse with proper care, feeding, and health care should also be taken into consideration.
2 answers
A zorse or zebrula is the offspring of a zebra stallion and a horse mare. A zorse is smarter and faster than a horse. It is easily trained and almost immune to hot weather.
1 answer
A zorse is a hybrid between a zebra and a horse. Depending on their specific environment, they may either live in grasslands or savannas, similar to where zebras and horses typically reside. However, because they are hybrid animals, their living conditions can vary based on their individual habitats.
6 answers
Any breed of horse can be bred with a zebra to produce a zorse! Hope this helps! :)
1 answer
it is a mammal of a zerbra and a horse how mate to have a zorse and it is a real species just really rare :)
2 answers
A zorse could live any place due to the behavior. The animal however could not survive in a desert. It is extremly hot out there.
6 answers
The Zorse will be born with the exact same adaptions as it's parents, but since it is an unnatural man made species it is unlike to change or develop it's own adaptions.
1 answer
its big teeth is the answer it helps it to take
1 answer
A zorse is a hybrid between a horse and a zebra. There are very few of them in the world, because they are difficult to breed, sterile, and because most people don't have zebras in the backyard to mate with horses in an attempt to create a hybrid. You're honestly better off finding yourself a nice-looking horse, because even if you did manage to track down a zorse (and believe me, that's a very, very big and very illegal IF) you'd probably find it has inherited the intractable nature of the zebra -eta, you can't ride it.
2 answers
I think that would be a Zorse.
1 answer
you guys are so stupid you could suck my @#$%
1 answer
zorses are real and they are combined a male zebra and a female horse.
2 answers
Zorses typically make sounds similar to horses, such as whinnying, neighing, and snorting. They may also produce sounds similar to zebras, such as a high-pitched bark or a braying noise.
2 answers
A zeehorse is an alternative name for a zorse, an offspring of a male zebra and a female horse.
1 answer
You would get a sterile foal. (Cannot be bred from)
3 answers
A Zorse is a mix between a Horse and a Zebra! The Zorse is one of a number of equine hybrids that are known as Zebroids, which is the name given to an equine hybrid that has Zebra ancestry. The Zorse is the result of crossbreeding a generally male Zebra (stallion) with a female Horse (mare) to produce an animal that looks like a Horse than a Zebra but having the features of a Zebra.
Try the link below for a photo.
1 answer
Any equine will eat about 2.5% of it's own body weight in forage daily.
3 answers
There is no one way to answer this question. A zorse will depend on how tall the horse was. The mule would be the same, I would need to know how tall the horse part of the mule was. As for zebras and donkeys, they usually stand 12 to 14 HH.
1 answer
well what you need to know is when were zebra's and horses discovered and then you might find out.. which is after their discovery
1 answer
yes. It makes a zorse. a donkey and a zebra make a zonkey
1 answer
They are called a Zorse. I've seen them, their cute but probably not very comfortable to ride.
1 answer
Any equine will eat about 2.5% of it's own body weight in forage daily.
1 answer
a hebra or zorse depending on if the mother is a horse or a zebra or it might be a quagga
Quagga's are an extinct species of the zebra family and not a cross breed. Hebra or Zorse are the correct answer
2 answers
Hybrid offspring can come from species with differing numbers of chromossomes, making them infertile.
1 answer
A zorse, which is a hybrid between a zebra and a horse, can live up to 25-30 years in captivity. The lifespan can be influenced by factors such as genetic health, diet, and proper care.
2 answers
Entirely fictional or fantasy. No such creature exists or has ever existed.
3 answers
nothing 99.9% of ligers are infirtile also it is a impossable cross
1 answer
Any zebra hybrid is called a 'zebroid', but a horse and a zebra specifically make what is called a 'zorse'.
1 answer
A hebra is a cross between a Horse and Zebra. Which means that they have a baby together. :)
There is also a possibility, that other than a Hebra, comes a Zorse!
There is a difference between the two though. What the difference is, is that the hebra has a Male Father Horse and a Female Mother Zebra. And the Zorse has a Male Father Zebra, and a Female Mother Horse. :P
1 answer
Crossing a zebra stallion on a horse mule produces a Zorse. Zebra hybrids are usually the result of a male zebra bred either to a female horse (zorse) or to a donkey jennet (Zebrass or zedonk).
3 answers
A mule. Liger. Zorse. Donkey and horse, tiger and lion, zebra and horse
1 answer