You are not going to get that "long answer." A cow's and human's digestive system is NOT the same, I don't care how you try to go about it. Yes they are similar in function, by the fact that they both break down and digest food or feed to more manageable and smaller molecules to be absorbed into the body via blood stream to the zillion cells that are in the body, but they are not the same in what is digested and the whole processes that set a cow's digestive system apart from that of a human's.
Cows are ruminants. They have a stomach with a four chambers.
It isn't, except the abomasum, which is a stomach that is similar in design to humans and other psuedo-ruminants' and monogastrics'
Both species have the same organs as the other in their digestive system: mouth, esophagus, stomach (in cows, the part of the four-chambered stomach that have similar digestive enzymes to a human's is called the Abomasum), liver, spleen, pancreas, large and small intestines, colon, rectum, anus, etc.
Cows are female bovines. Bulls are male bovines. Therefore they have the same digestive system!!
At their mouths.
Besides length, a cow's intestines are no different from a human's. Both have the same functions as the other when it comes down to digestive processes in the digestive system.
It doesn't.
View the following related links for a couple example of a cow's digestive system.
Not in your stomach as it is too acidic for bacteria. Cows have a stomach compartment just for bacterial digestive action that produces methane. Perhaps in your intestinal region methane can be produced.
Yes, cows have digestive juices as well as humans too! They need it to soften the food and swallow it. They chew it too! ( i only think so so don't take it for real.
keeps their digestive system healthy jusy like humans.
cows CAN eat horse pellets, but it is not good for their digestive system. I wouldn't recommend trying it...
Because cows are bigger than us and they have a larger digestive system than we do.
A cow has a four-chambered stomach designed to digest coarse plant material.