Yes, these teats are sometimes called fishtail teats and it can be difficult for kids to suckle on them.
No, goats are just built to have two mammary glands with two teats.
Definitely in fresh WolfCum™
Horses have two teats on their belly sort of like goats and when they have a baby the foal sucks milk from the teats and drinks it until they are old enough to eat grass and other plants.
NO. Cows only have ONE udder, and on that udder they have four teats.
Actually, 8 is usually the norm, however six or ten is common. Sometimes they can have an odd number too.
double of half
Non. "babies" are produced by humans, Goats produce "kids". A goat has two teats and therefore the maximum number of kids is normally two.
10 teats is rather minimal. 12 teats is common. 14 teats is a good breeder. 16 teats is a superior sow.
This is rare to have six kids at a time and they would need supplementary feeding as the doe only has two teats. They may just be very fecund or the farmer may have given them a drug so that they would superovulate ie release a number of eggs to be fertilised at serving.
Yes, just like human males have teats and cows and heifers have teats. The only difference between the teats of bulls and cows is that the teats of a bull are non-functional.
Goats are a third to a quarter of the size of cows, for one. And, they only have two teats on their udders, unlike cows which have four. Goats' milk contains different enzymes and lacks lactose than cows milk does, and is also rich in buttermilk fat.
Cattle are bigger and blockier than goats are. Goats only have two teats on their udder whereas cows have four. Goats have a more pliable lip than cows do, and also tend to like eating more browse than grass. Goats love to climb and often do: cows cannot climb and often do not, unless there's a very good reason that she has to go through the fence to the other side.