musclemom said:
PREDATORS, Chimps are not predators. They are humans with more fur and less laws. They are disgusting nasty, vulgar animals; no other animal rapes, either, humans and chimps, the winners. Any other animal, the female chooses and if she refuses that's it, deals over. No other animal plays with it's own shit, either.
Animals (only that I happen to know of) that rape-
Chimps
ducks (they have GANG rapes, all the males pick and pin her down until she
submits, this is violent and takes a long time. I have seen it happen. It´s actually the only way they procreate)
spiders (they also eat their male and then the kids eat the mom)
Dolphins (they are also often bisexual or even homosexual and will even rape out of anger, rather than only procreation)
As for poop-
Pigs play with their shit. They roll around in it. Even when they have room to avoid it.
Rabbits re-eat their shit.
Dogs eat their own and other dogs´ shit.
Elephants eat their parents shit to obtain the metabolic bacteria they need in their guts.
Gorilla´s re-eat their shit, they also eat their sperm after they masturbate.
Babboons throw poop at other animals.
Also- since this thread is about horses- here´s a bit on horses and their POOP
Arabian mares seem to be more predisposed to rejection of foals than Thoroughbreds, with the presence of one of two related sires being statistically higher in the pedigrees of rejecting versus non-rejecting mares (Juarbe-Diaz et al., 1998). Fostering is difficult and the mare probably recognises her foal by smell, visual and auditory cues. When attempting to foster a foal, it is advisable to mask an introduced foal’s odour by smearing it with the prospective surrogate dam’s own milk and applying her own faeces to the tail and head of the foal. It also helps to apply vaporous ointments to the nostrils of nurse mares prior to the removal of their own foals (Kelly, 1999). It has been reported (Tyler, 1972) that a mare accepted an orphaned foal draped in the skin of the mare’s dead three-year-old filly. Mares accept foals within 1 to 12 hours of an introduction but it is not advisable to leave the pair unsupervised until they have been together for three days (Kelly, 1999). Coprophagy (eating faeces) is normal in foals and commonly occurs at 4–6 weeks of age, possibly as a means of learning preferred forage types (Crowell-Davis, & Caudle, 1989).
There you go, nice poop playing for the whole family.
You are an emotional thinker, not a rational one, you should stick to speaking your own language.