Yes, both cattle and horses have diaphragms to aid in respiration. All mammals have diaphragms and there isn't a mammal who can live without one.
Shipping fever is more common in cattle than in horses. However, you could help alleviate the fever with some phenylbutazone. Shipping fever is a multiple infection syndrome, generally involving a primary viral infection of the upper respiratory system complicated by a secondary bacterial infection.
A horses respiratory system temporarily adapts to different altitudes using a method called IHT. IHT improves increased hypoxic ventilatory response and increased minute ventilation which increases total and vital lung capacity.
It's really hard to say. If horses have a transmissible disease that affects cattle (and I cannot think of any right off hand), then perhaps. But I haven't yet heard of any real serious immune illnesses that are easily transferred from horses to cattle, sorry.
Evendentually they do, or else they couldn't have lived in the wild for so long.
The respiratory system is the system that handles breathing.
The Respiratory System
The respiratory system of a marsupial is similar to that of humans, in that they have diaphragms and lungs. These are not fully mature at birth however but develop while the joey is still in the pouch.
The trachea is the airway in the respiratory system.
The larynx belongs to the respiratory system.
no, they do not have a respiratory system
The respiratory system.
Respiratory system