Some might say it's from a cow being "over-milked," which wouldn't be the case of all, but from the skin on the teats getting dry and cracked, much like if your hands or feet get dry from being subject to too much water or dried out too quickly. When they get cracked, they start to bleed a little, and naturally scabs form to cover these cracks and heal them. Of course, with cows having to be milked regularly, the producer or hired hand caring for these cows need to address this problem by putting a kind of lotion suitable for udders to help both heal these "wounds," and moisturize the skin on the udder.
No. Scabs occur on the outside of a cow's body, not on the inside (i.e. the udder).
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.
Cows and other animals have teats, women have breasts.
Cows and first-calf heifers have four functional teats.
Please see your veterinarian for information on this.
The teats (or tits).
Its dehydrated, this is where powdered milk comes from.
For Sanitation purposes prior to milking the cow.
no For cattle, cow is the designation for female, which has an udder and teats. The male, the bull, like most mammals, has rudimentary nipples but no teats and no udder.
NO. Cows only have ONE udder, and on that udder they have four teats.
A cows udder is sometimes referred to by the name teats. They can also be referred to as mammary glands because they supply milk.
A cow only has one udder, with four teats for each quarter of the udder.
No they suck on it. They form a vacuum with their mouths to get the milk out of the teat.