Yes. If you are hand-broadcasting seed over a pasture or in spots where a cow can eat it, she will defecate it out. This seed will grow from this manure and thus repopulate the current stand in the pasture.
i believe its the cell wall of plants, cows keep chewing to get the most nutrition out of the grass
Cows' feces is not grass because it is a byproduct of digestion. When cows eat grass, their digestive systems break down the plant material through fermentation and microbial action, extracting nutrients. The remaining waste, which includes undigested fibers, bacteria, and other substances, is excreted as feces. Thus, while grass is the input, the feces is a transformed output resulting from the complex digestive process.
cows eat grass they don't get a lot of nutrients. They need to ferment the grass in multiple levels of their stomachs to get the most out of it.
Cows are female bovines. Bulls are male bovines. Therefore they have the same digestive system!!
At their mouths.
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.
It doesn't.
View the following related links for a couple example of a cow's digestive system.
Cows are herbivores that primarily feed on grass, hay, and other plant-based materials. They have a specialized digestive system that allows them to break down cellulose in plant matter and extract nutrients for energy. Generally, cows do not prey on other animals.
Cows get carbohydrates from plants such as grass, hay, and grains that they consume as part of their diet. These carbohydrates are broken down in the cow's digestive system to provide energy for various biological processes and activities.
No.
Not normally. Cows have digestive systems that are designed to deal with grass as the food. However a LITTLE cereal grain in their diet will not harm them.