A cow produces approximately 87 quarts of saliva a day.
A dairy cow will produce anywhere from 10 to 45 gallons of saliva per day.
the average cow produces 29 glasses of milk each day
Cow saliva. Actually, I drink it.
Well, I don't know if a cow produces THAT much saliva, but really it's because of the fact that she tends to instinctively regurgitate and chew cud. Saliva helps break down the partly digested matter a bit more before it's reswallowed and redigested in the rumen.
The salivary glands in a mature cow are approximately three feet long. The have a capacity of two gallons. A mature cow can produce up to fifty quarts of saliva each day.
They most certainly do, and large ones at that. They need to produce saliva to help create an adequate buffer for the rumen and to make it much easier to swallow the kind of food they eat whole. It is estimated that an adult cow produces around 200 L (some say between 40 to 150 L) of saliva a day.
a cow can produce 1,050 to 1,200 per week (121.8 to 146.3 gallons)
65poo
12 gallons
None. Dairy cows produce milk, not money.
A young cow can produce 25 gallons of milk a week. A jersey cow, 28 gallons per week. Guess it depends on the size of the cow. And no, cows that stand in the shade do NOT give chocolate milk. :) My parents Holsteins were giving approximately 40-49 gal a week. My Jersey on silage will produce 35gal per week. On grain and hay she will produce 28gal per week. How much a cow produces depends a lot on what they are being fed and how stressed they are. A happy cow will give more milk than an unhappy cow, and the higher the quality of the feed, the more milk they are able to produce.
Around 25 lbs per day.