The molar teeth act as grinders that grind up forage into more smaller pieces that can be swallowed without difficulty. The molars are also used when cows are chewing their cud, which is a bolus of partially digested feed that is chewed more thoroughly.
They grind the grass down into smaller pieces.
Just like in humans, molars are used to chew grass, breaking it down in smaller pieces so it can be swallowed.
Cows have usually molar teeth because they eat grass, and to eat gras you need to chew it hard so you can digest it. This is what molar teeth exactly can be used for
Cows do not have canine teeth.
Cows do not have upper incisors, unlike us humans. Their bottom teeth are also flatter for cutting off grass that the cow has grabbed and pulled in with her tongue. The molars of a cow are more flatter as well.
There is no such thing or grass species as "cow grass."
Not at all. Grass is eaten by a cow, not produced by a cow.
It may appear that a cow licks grass but actually it grabs it with its tongue to get it into its mouth. A cow or any bovine for that matter has only the lower set of teeth not the tops so it can't bite hay or grass like a horse.
What are somw of a dairy cow's adaptations?
Cow's teeth are similar to our back teeth; our molars. All of their teeth are flat because of the constant grinding motion they make with their mouth. They only eat plant products such as grass or corn, unlike humans who are omnivores and eat both meat and plants. Our front teeth are more pointed so that we are able to tear food.
No. Cows EAT grass. They do not "have" grass.
Cow's graze on grass to feed as they can easily digest grass.
no a cow is an animal, that eats grass land plants.