Around 75 to 90% of a cow is made up of water.
A cow typically needs 7% (non-lactating cows) to 10% (lactating) of her body weight in water per day.
Depending on her size and her level of water consumption, a cow can expell around 20 L of urine per day. Usually, the more water a cow will drink the bigger her urine output.
A dairy cow will drink upwards of 40 to 50 gal. of water per day.
It contains about 87 percent water and 13 percent solids
That depends on a lot of factors, including breed, physiological factors, reproductive factors, salinity of the feed, dryness of the feed, environmental factors, etc. Typically a cow will drink around 7% to 10% of her body weight in water per day.
No! The sphincter muscle has nothing to do with how a cow breathes! A cow would drown if she cannot swim or if she gets too much water in the lungs.
One cow contains such a minute amount of the world's water that it is considered insignificant.
On average a full grown cow produces approximatley 150 Lbs or 68Kg of manure per day with a average of 65% to 70% of this being water.
I'd imagine it is much the same as horses. An undercover area with water and hay?
They can drink between 15-30 gallons of water/day,however, this varies for each cow depending on size, outside temperature etc.
Probably not even a cow at all.