According to a food web...nothing...well that's the food web...I eat beef.
The cow.
No, a cow will not eat meat, although there will be some curious cow that would probably try it, cows do not and will not eat meat.
There's no such thing as an "organic cow." A cow is a cow, regardless. She will eat what "normal" cows eat, which is defined in the related question posted below.
If you eat a sacred cow, you will be subjected to the disapproval of those who considered the cow to be sacred.
The cow pulls the plow. Without the cow, there would be no agriculture. You do not eat your seed corn. You do not kill and eat the animal that pulls your plow.
Why would you even think about doing that? Good luck. I woudn't recommend trying it In order to eat a live cow, you would have to be big enough to put it in your mouth whole. If you are butchering it, slicing of portions for eating, they will be dead when you eat them even if the cow isn't. It would be incredibly cruel to do this.
Depending on how hungry it is, yes it probably would.
No, this would be a part that would be redeemed as scrap.
the samw thing u would if u ate cow an omnivore
You've got to be kidding? How could a little ferret ever injure or eat a cow? Maybe cooked cow would be eaten by a ferret, sometimes I share my hamburger with him!
Humans don't digest all plant material very well. If you can get nutrition out of it, it's more efficient if you can eat the plant material directly. If you have to feed it to a cow, and then eat the cow, a lot of the nutrition will be lost in the transition. But if you can't get nutrition out of it, and the cow can, then feeding it to a cow would be sensible.
Jerseys would eat what a typical dairy cow would eat, being a TMR ration or grazing grass out on pasture. See the related question below for a more detailed answer.