No. It only affects sheep or goats. Anemia and "bottle jaw", the accumulation of fluid under the lower jaw, occur primarily with an infestation of the worm H. contortus.
Bottle jaw in sheep and goats is soft fluid swelling under the jaw as a result of anaemia usually due to haemonchosis (Barber's Pole worm infestation) - the treatment for bottle jaw is drenching for worms.
The teeth of sheep have adapted for the function of eating. Depending on where the sheep lives, its teeth and jaw will be different. The teeth will adapt to its food, making it the easiest for the sheep to eat, and those sheep will reproduce.
Yes frogs have a jaw. There is a jaw bone much like humans only much smaller, and thinner.
The upper jaw on fishes functions the same as the upper jaw in Humans . They just have different teeth. The upper jaw on most animals functions as a platform for the lower jaw to close against .
crocks
ants jaw are much smaller and humans jaw are much bigger.
ants jaw are much smaller and humans jaw are much bigger.
ants jaw are much smaller and humans jaw are much bigger.
they use there jaw for going up and down
a bottle nose dolphin has 18-26 small sharp teeth on each side of its upper and lower jaw.
George W. Muir has written: 'Bulldog-jaw and parrot-mouth defects of sheep' -- subject(s): Sheep, Moutons, Anatomie, Diseases
Cows don't have upper incisors nor canines. Incisors on the lower jaw are pointed more outward than humans are, and the molars on both the bottom and upper jaw are flatter. Cows do not have canines.