Yes ,cow is an ungulate mammal as it possess hooves.
Horses are odd-toed ungulates, as they only have one toe, protected by the hoof.
yes
An ungulate is a hoofed mammal. They're divided into even-toed ungulates (pigs, camels, deer, cows, etc.) and odd toed ungulates (horses, rhinoes, etc) and a third group which includes elephants, hyraxes, and manatees. All of these are ungulates. The ungulate you are most likely to see on a daily basis is probably the cow. See related link.
A pig is classified as an ungulate because it has hooves. It is classified as an artiodactyl also because it has an even number of toes.
Toe nails are modified to form hooves .
Cattle include cow , buffalo , goat etc. and all of them are even toed ungulates.Even toed Ungulates are included in order Artiodactyla. They have 2 or 4 toes in each foot. Two hoofs are reduced while 2 are well developed.They are paraxonic that is the center of gravity passes in between two hoofs.They are grazers and Ruminants.
No. Every last cow cell in a cow are eukaryotic.
No. A cow is a bovine or an ungulate, not a rodent. Rats, mice and gophers are rodents, not cows.
No, an ungulate is an animal which has 'hooves' - like a cow. A Bush Baby is primate (it belongs to the same family as man) and therefore has hands and feet with fingers and toes like you or me - no hooves!.
No. Ungulate are animals with hooves. Platypuses do not have hooves.
Cows naturally eat the placenta after their calf is born. This is to deter predators from investigating the birthing site and possibly finding the cow's calf. It is something done by all ungulate mothers, both domesticated and wild.
A Large Ungulate Called The Bubal Hartebeest.
Tapir
An ungulate is a hoofed mammal. They're divided into even-toed ungulates (pigs, camels, deer, cows, etc.) and odd toed ungulates (horses, rhinoes, etc) and a third group which includes elephants, hyraxes, and manatees. All of these are ungulates. The ungulate you are most likely to see on a daily basis is probably the cow. See related link.
A mammal with hooves.
tapir
tapir
Hoofs (or hooves).
Yes.