The teats on the udder.
The floor of the udder is just that- The floor of the udder. The shape of the udder is determined by the medial and lateral suspensatory ligaments. Poor ligaments mean a saggy, mastitis prone, misshapen udder.
The Udder.
A complex system of ligaments holds the udder to the abdomen.
When the cow's udder is full and heavy, it needs to be milked.
Cows only have one "breast," and that is the udder.
The udder will only swell, the cow is dropping her milk into the milk cisterns in the udder for the calf to suckle.
Generally, udder treatments are done using a teat cannula...the medication is infused into the affected quadrant(s) of the udder by sliding the cannula into the udder through the openings where milk would normally pass out during the suckling process and the medication would be pushed into the udder via syringe.
The udder, just like in a cow. The udder is stationed in the same area as a cow's, only there are just two teats, not four, on that udder.
A cow only has one udder, with four teats for each quarter of the udder.
Udder 1 three nipples and udder 2 four nipples
Udder size is heritable, yes. This is quantified by milk production: as we've seen in dairy cows, the larger the udder the more milk a cow will (or should) produce.