Cattle, sheep, goats - even your mum. =]
they are in kingdom archaebacteria.
Cows produce methane gas!
Burping
Methane .
Cattle are responsible for the production of more methane than any other animal, which includes humans. For more information please view the attached related link. "Non-dairy cattle and dairy cows together contribute about 75% of the total methane source from animals; the remainder is from water buffalo, sheep, goats, pigs, camels, and horses."
if animals sweat,w\they evaporates and condenses into water droplets
The release of energy in plants and animals is called respiration.
respiration
they release methane gas and co2
All animals release carbon dioxide by breathing.All animals, humans included, release food waste.Cattle and other ruminant animals release methane from both ends, but mostly from the front.
Methane from their rear end and carbon dioxide and all the stuff they breathed in from the mouth
Bacteria in the stomachs of cows and other ruminants (animals with chambered stomachs) produce methane, a strong greenhouse gas, that the animals release mostly by burping but sometimes also by farting. Ruminant livestock (domestic farm animals), including cows and sheep, do release a significant amount of methane.
all plant eating animals do give off methane.
Landfills release carbon dioxide from aerobic rotting organic matter, and methane if the rotting is anaerobic (without oxygen).Animals we raise for food (mostly cattle) release methane, mostly by burping, but a little by farting.Burning coal releases carbon dioxide.
Methane .
Because marshes tend to release methane.
oxygen
Exothermic is a release of heat, so when methane burns, it must release heat to be exothermic.
Methane is one
The farting and belching of animals, mostly humans and the domesticated animals used to feed and clothe them, contribute millions of tonnes of Methane to the atmosphere. Methane adds to global warming, a great pity because methane is a valuable source of free power. Capturing it out of the atmospere is the problem.