Cows are essentially meat when they are butchered. And meat comes from cows, which is muscle, so the question really doesn't make much sense.
Human meat, and cups of cow blood(:
Meat from a cow, obviously.
Energy is passed from cow to cow through the food chain. Cows consume plants as their primary energy source. When one cow eats plants, it metabolizes the energy from the plants, which then gets transferred to other cows that might consume that cow as food. This flow of energy from one cow to another is known as the transfer of energy through trophic levels in a food chain.
No, a cow will not eat meat, although there will be some curious cow that would probably try it, cows do not and will not eat meat.
the whole energy transfer to that particular part
"Cow meat" -- aka Beef -- gets eaten by humans.
They're one and the same, there's no difference between "cattle meat" and "cow meat." Cow and/or cattle meat is called Beef, regardless what class or type of bovine it came from.
any cow-meat product that didn't have any nuclear power or energy to make it
you get milk and the meat of the cow,beef
An example of a food chain with a human would be: grass (producer) -> cow (primary consumer) -> human (secondary consumer). In this chain, the human consumes the meat of the cow as a source of energy and nutrients.
cow meat
cow meat