The mothers udder or breast.
The Udder is used to feed the newborn calf.
Humans are mammals. How could they be used in medicine on humans, if they won't feed on mammals.
Your question seems to suggest that mammals that feed milk to their young are a subset of mammals. But all mammals feed milk to their young. That, along with the presence of hair, is the defining characteristic of all mammals, without exceptions.
That organ is called the udder. It's located between her hind legs with four teats that the calf can latch on to--which ever teat he prefers--and get milk from through suckling. Milk is produced in the udder by drawing nutrients from the cow's bloodstream and synthesizing other compounds like casein and lactose. For calves that are newborn to two or three months of age, it's the most nutritious source for them to consume in order to grow.
The organ responsible for breathing is your lungs.
A copulatory organ is the reproductive structure that is used during sexual intercourse to transfer sperm from one individual to another. This organ can vary between different species, such as the penis in mammals or the modified legs in some insects.
Lactation is the secretion of milk from a mammals mammary glands. Originating from the nipples, lactation is used mainly in breastfeeding newborn babies.
no because cows are female. bulls are male
A whale's mammary glands are located near the groin of the whale. Females use these glands to feed their young, much like other mammals.
native mammals
The cows udder is an organ formed by its mammary glands and hangs in a single mass beneath the cow. The udder produces milk which is used to feed their young and collected for human consumption.
No, elephants do not mate using their trunks. They have a reproductive organ called a penis that is used for mating. The trunk is used for various other functions such as feeding, breathing, and communication.