Sheep have one stomach with four compartments. These compartments are called, the Rumen, Abomasum, Reticulum, and Omasum.
Sheep have four-chambered stomachs.
Most whole objects have three thirds. If you are talking about stomachs, ruminants, such as sheep, goats and cows are considered to have 4.
Sheep are like most ruminants and have a single stomach with four very distinct compartments; the four compartments are often referred to as four different stomachs. The four compartments are called the rumen, the reticulum, the omasum and the abomasum.
Animals with multiple stomachs are known as ruminants. Examples of these are cattle, sheep and goats. They do not actually have multiple stomachs, but stomachs which have a number of 'compartments'. The examples given above are characterised by having four distinct sections to their stomachs, although camelids (camels, llamas, alpacas, vicunas) have a slightly different arangement and are sometimes described as having three stomachs.
Yes a sheep's stomach has four compartments, the rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum.
There is no such animal on Earth at this time, that we know of. The animal with the most number of stomachs is the cow, which has a total of four.
4 stomachs in a moose
piranhas have 2 stomachs
Uh, stomachs have NO COWS!
No, a sheep has only one stomach, but it has four compartments within that stomach called the rumen, reticulum, omasum, and abomasum. These compartments work together to digest the food the sheep eats.
Four. Other ruminants (choose any two) include bison, cape buffalo, deer, sheep, yak, and antelope, among many others.
It is at the bottom of the starfish