Sheep are fairly small compared to other
ungulates; in most species, adults weigh less than . Males are usually significantly heavier than females. Wild sheep are mostly found in hilly or mountainous habitats. Their diets consist mainly of
grasses, as well as other plants and
lichens. Like other
ruminants, they have four-chambered
stomachs, which play a vital role in
digesting food; they
eructate, and rechew the
cud to enable them to digest and live on low-quality, rough plant materials. Sheep conserve water well, and can live in fairly dry environments. The bodies of wild sheep (and some domestic breeds) are covered by a coat of thick
hair to protect them from cold. This coat contains long, stiff hairs, called
kemps, over a short, woolly undercoat, which grows in autumn and is shed in spring. This woolly undercoat has been developed in many domestic sheep breeds into a fleece of long
wool, with selection against kemp hairs in these breeds. The fleece covers the body (in a few breeds also the face and legs) and is used for
fibre. Domestic sheep are also reared for their
milk and
meat (which is called
lamb or mutton depending on the age of the animal). In wild sheep, both rams and ewes have
horns, while in domestic sheep (depending upon
breed) horns may be present in both rams and ewes, in rams only, or in neither. Rams' horns may be very large – those of a mature bighorn ram can weigh – as much as the bones of the rest of its body put together. Rams use their horns to fight with each other for dominance and the right to mate with females. In most cases, they do not injure each other because they hit each other head-to-head, and their curved horns do not strike each other's bodies. They are also protected by having very thick skin and double-layered skulls. Wild sheep have very keen
senses of
sight and
hearing. When detecting predators, wild sheep most often flee, usually to higher ground, but they can also fight back. The Dall sheep has been known to butt
wolves off the face of cliffs. Sheep have
scent glands on their faces and feet. Communication through the scent glands is not well understood, but is thought to be important for sexual signaling. Males can smell females that are in
estrus, and rams
mark their territories by rubbing scent on rocks. ==Species==