no..............
Most ungulates, or hooved animals, are herbivors, such as horses, all ruminants like cows, and elephants. However, pigs are also ungulates, and they are omnivores.
No, ruminants are those animals like cows which regurgitate their food and chew it, then swallow it again for further digestion. Elephants don't do this, their food passes straight through the alimentary canal as ours does.
Yes, birds are non-ruminants.
yes canine teeth are present in ruminants
Elephants are not ruminants and therefore do not have four stomachs. Their stomach is very similar to mammals with a simple stomach much like our own.
Yes. Hind-gut fermentors are psuedo-ruminants.
The major difference is protein sources. Ruminants require less protein than non-ruminants, and consequently require more fibre in their diet than non-ruminants. Non-ruminants cannot digest fibre and cellulose nearly as well as ruminants can, and thus need higher concentrate feedstuffs to actually do well.
following are the non ruminants..........HUMANS,PIG,MOUSE,HORSE etc
Yes indeed! Ruminants include wildebeest, hartebeest, cape buffalo, gazelles, springbok (and all other species of antelope) and giraffes. Non-ruminants include lions, zebras, hyenas, crocodiles, baboons, hippos, rhinos, etc.
Not all cloven animals are ruminants. Cloven animals, or even-toed ungulates, include both ruminants, like cows and sheep, which have a specialized stomach for fermentation and digestion, and non-ruminants, like pigs and hippos, which do not. While ruminants possess a complex stomach structure that allows them to break down fibrous plant material through fermentation, non-ruminants have simpler digestive systems. Thus, while there is overlap, the two categories are distinct.
Yes.
No, ruminants are those animals like cows which regurgitate their food and chew it, then swallow it again for further digestion. Elephants don't do this, their food passes straight through the alimentary canal as ours does.