cows have seven stomachs
Yes, just like in humans, even though a cow's digestive system is a bit different and a bit bigger. Bloat, Acidosis, Hardware Disease, Impaction, Ulcers and Choking are the more common ailments in the digestive system of cattle.
Yes, a cow's digestive system involves chemistry. The digestive processes of all animals involve some type of chemical digestion.
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.
Yes.
To us humans, what makes a cow's digestive system unusual to us is that they have a four-chambered stomach and a functioning cecum, all perfectly made to efficiently digest and utilize roughage like grass and alfalfa.
View the following related links for a couple example of a cow's digestive system.
A cow has a four-chambered stomach designed to digest coarse plant material.
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.
they are both same
The poultry digestive system is similar to that of a human. The cow's digestive system is designed so that it chews its cud several times to get the maximum nutrition from it.
Unless there's bits of plastic on the hat that may block the cow's digestive system on the way down and out, it shouldn't hurt the cow.
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.