Cellulose.
it helps food digest
It will die as it needs a rumen to digest its food properly.
A rumen.
The rumen.
Actually ruminants cannot digest cellulose, they have symbiotic bacteria in a part of their stomach called a "rumen" digest the cellulose down to sugars and starches that the ruminants can actually digest in another part of their stomach later.
Microbes and bacteria digest the cellulose and plant material that the goat eats in the rumen. The goat's digestive system then absorbs these by-products.
Yes a sheep's stomach has four compartments, the rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum.
Bacteria and protozoa in the rumen help digest plant fibers and break down complex carbohydrates into simpler molecules that can be absorbed by the animal. They also assist in the production of volatile fatty acids, which serve as an important energy source for the host animal. Additionally, they aid in the maintenance of a stable microbial ecosystem within the rumen.
Goats have one stomach with four compartments; the rumen, reticulum, omasum, and abomasum, in that order.
The chamber in the digestive tract of grazing mammals where cellulose is broken down is called the rumen. It is a specialized stomach compartment where bacteria and other microorganisms help digest cellulose by fermentation.
A cow has one stomach with four compartments: the rumen, reticulum, omasum, and abomasum. These compartments work together to digest the cow's food.
The organs that are involved during a digestion, are a stomach, the mouth, the large intestine, and the small intestine.