Yes, the horse has only one true stomach compartment, but they are actually pseudoruminants because they have an enlarged cecum.
No they are monogastric.
Llamas are ruminants
Yes a deer is a monogastric (having one digestive cavity) herbivore (animal that gets its energy from eating plants and only plants).
The part of the ruminant digestive tract that functions similarly to the stomach of a monogastric animal is the abomasum. It is the fourth chamber in the ruminant's digestive system and is responsible for the enzymatic digestion of food, similar to how a stomach operates in monogastric animals. The abomasum secretes gastric juices and enzymes that break down proteins, facilitating nutrient absorption.
the monogastric as it can digest all types of food
Cattle, sheep, goats, deer, moose, all species of antelope, giraffes, camels, llamas, rhinocerouses, yaks, bison, buffalo, elk, reindeer, caribou, and muskox are some of many species that are all ruminants (or in your case, not non-ruminant or monogastric species.)
Cattle, sheep, goats, deer, moose, all species of antelope, giraffes, camels, llamas, rhinocerouses, yaks, bison, buffalo, elk, reindeer, caribou, and muskox are some of many species that are all ruminants (or in your case, not non-ruminant or monogastric species.)
Stephen J. Gunther has written: 'Coprophagy in monogastric and ruminant species'
Deer, dik-dik antelope, and duiker antelope are ruminant mammals that begin with the letter d.
No, pigs are monogastrics. There is a rare kind of pig on southeast Asian Islands called a Babirusa which issupposedly ruminant to some extent, but familiar pigs are not.
All deer are herbivores, plant eaters.
Yes.