Carabao get their food the exact same way that cows do: they have a powerful tongue that they use to wrap around and grasp the sward of grass or leaves and pull it into their mouths, using their lower incisors and movement of the head to tear the grass from the ground and the leaves from the twigs...or the entire twig itself. They chew that for a couple seconds, swallow then repeat the process. When they're eating grass they simply swallow it whole. They bring it back up later when their resting and chew the partly digested plant matter as cud.
The carabao eat their food by chewing it :)
grasses or plants.. :)
hey can eat it
Anything!
No they are herbivores as in only eat vegetation
The heron feeds on ticks that get on the carabao's body. In this way, the heron benefits by having food to eat and the carabao benefits by getting the ticks cleaned off. This kind of relationship is called mutualism.
commensalism?
because they need to eat plants and build shelter which require land
beacause when a carabao lay on a mud he keeps the cud on his pocket and after that he will eat the cud and slowly he will digest the cud and transfer it to another stomach................................ from: jaely anne d. jamandra
The collective noun for carabao (a type of water buffalo) is a herd of carabao.
the carabao gets its flea control solution with the help of the carabao egret while the carabao's built serves as a defense or source of security..
The offspring of a carabao, which is a domesticated water buffalo commonly found in Southeast Asia, is called a calf. Like other bovines, carabao calves are typically born after a gestation period of about 10 months. They are usually nursed by their mothers until they are old enough to eat solid food.