Any that belong to the group called ruminates. There are 150 species of ruminants, which include both domestic and wild species. Ruminating mammals include cattle, goats, sheep, giraffes, yaks, deer, camels, llamas, and antelope.
Any animal that is not a ruminant. This includes pigs, horses and horse-related animals, all birds of any kind, all carnivores of any kind (wolves, dogs, cats, cougars, tigers, lions, etc.), all omnivores of any kind (bears, raccoons, humans, monkeys, baboons, chimps, gorillas, wild boars, etc.) and all insects. Elephants, rhinos, hippos, and I believe giraffes don't chew cud either. Neither do the little ground squirrels, rabbits or hares, moles, voles, mice, lemmings, shrews, bats, weasels, ferrets, pine martins, wolverines, skunks, lemurs, Meerkats, rats, nor sloths.
Thus any animal that is not related to the deer family, goat family, sheep family, bovine/bison family, camel family and antelope family do not chew cud or, in essence, are not ruminants.
Cattle, sheep, antelope, deer and giraffes.
sheephorsecamel has 4
Ruminantsare animals that have a 4 chambered stomach, meaning they have one stomach with four divisions. Ruminants include some large animals that chew grass or leaves, such as cows and sheep.It is sometimes believed that almost any animal that chews grass or leaves is a ruminant with four stomachs but this is certainly not the case. Herbivorous marsupials are not ruminants; nor are rabbits and hares, or camels, llamas and alpacas, for example.
4
There is no such animal on Earth at this time, that we know of. The animal with the most number of stomachs is the cow, which has a total of four.
Yes, they do. Many large animals that chew grass or leaves are 'ruminants', that is, they have a 4 chambered stomach. (This excludes camels, alpacas and llamas, and members of the horse or equine family.) It is sometimes believed that almost any animal that chews grass or leaves is a ruminant with four stomachs but this is certainly not the case. Herbivorous marsupials are not ruminants; nor are rabbits and hares, for example.
None. The most is a cow, with 4.
Ruminants are animals that chew their cud and have 4 stomachs. This includes cattle, sheep, goats and antelope.
A ruminant's digestive tract has 4 sections to its stomach. Because the plant matter that most ruminants enjoy is hard to digest, ruminants have to regurgitate food to chew it again (e.i., "chewing the cud"). The four stomachs allow the hard-to-digest food to be digested many times.
Bison have four stomachs like all other bovines in the bovidae family.
There are actually many animals that have four stomachs; two of the commonly known ones in the United States are cattle and bison.
A long, strong grassland animal may possess a hinged jaw, which allows them to graze on tough vegetation. Grizzlies have claws to be able to dig up the ground and they have sharp canines to bite and grip their prey.
No animal has four stomachs. All animals that live on Earth only have one stomach. Most herbivores, except equines and those of the rabbit/hare families, have four chambers in their stomachs, such as cattle, antelope, deer, elk, bison, buffalo, moose, giraffes, etc.
The Torah requires that animals that Jews consume have split hooves and chew their cud. Horses do not have split hooves. http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cookbook:Kosher Horses also do not chew cud.
Giraffes belong to the clade Ruminantia. All members of this clade have a four chambered stomach. The first chamber is where chewed food ferments. Every so often, they belch up some of the partially digested plants, or cud, from the first stomach, and chew it again. The next two chambers act as a filter, allowing small particles to pass to the fourth chamber, but sending larger particles back to the first chamber. The fourth chamber uses enzymes to further work on digesting the food.
4 stomachs in a moose
Cows need to eat nearly all the time. There are "cud chewing" herbivores with a primary diet of grass. They have 4 stomachs and need to eat a lot of grass which passes between the stomachs to allow bacteria to break down the cellulose so that the cow can obtain the proteins and sugars it needs. When feeding hay or silage the cow needs a plentiful supply of these to keep its stomachs charged.
Ruminant animals have 4 stomachs but the microbed don't produce cellulose, they break it down.
Could be anything, really. At this point its best to see your veterinarian to see what's wrong with your steer and see what can be done to help him.