No. Cows don't pollinate grasses, they eat them.
No. Corn is really a variety of grass, and grasses are wind pollinated.
Plants being grasses and forbs.
They get the fibre from the plants (i.e., grasses and legumes) that they eat.
Cows are largely held in captivity and feed on hays and grasses. They can be found in pastures and fields.
Since cows are grazers and eat mostly grasses and legumes, they are herbivores. That's as good an inference about what cows eat as anyone would be able to come up with.
Cows learn where to go for water, when milking time is (for dairy cows), when it's time to switch to a better pasture (for cows that are being rotationally grazed), what feed and grasses are the best to eat, etc.
Charles Louis Flint has written: 'Milch cows and dairy farming, comprising the breeds, breeding, and management in health and disease, of dairy and other stock' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Cows, Dairying 'Grasses and forage plants' -- subject(s): Grasses, Forage plants, Hay 'A practical treatise on grasses and forage plants' -- subject(s): Grasses, Forage plants
Without bees, we would be missing much of our food. Bees pollinate any of the fruits and vegetables we eat, along with some grains, and grasses.
Most herbivores have the ability to eat wild grasses.
Other animals that eat grass are grasshoppers, cows, horse's and that's all peace out
Bees pollinate different plants by transferring their pollen or seeds from one area to the next. This spreads the crop and promotes more growth. Honey bees and solitary bees mostly pollinate buckwheat, which is a form of wheat.
Many plants, particularly grasses, are wind pollinated. The wind picks up pollen grains from the seeds and carries them to other seed heads which they can then pollinate.