I'm pretty sure they usually have more than 1 stomach (ex: cows have 4), and their teeth are made for grinding up plants.Cellulose is broken down in two ways, mostly:
Mechanically, animals will keep grinding it with their teeth or in their stomachs with small swallowed stones until it's broken down and the cell contents spill out. Cows for instance will keep regurtitating their food so that they can chew it for a long time.
With enzymes, more specifically cellulase, which mammals don't produce. Grazers live with bacteria in their gut which do, and these break down the molecular structure of cellulose.
cud chewing
Plants
A key adaptation common to all embryos is the presence of a protective structure, such as the amniotic sac in mammals or the egg membrane in reptiles and birds, which provides a controlled environment for development. This adaptation helps to safeguard the developing embryo from physical damage and desiccation, while also allowing for the exchange of gases and nutrients. Additionally, the ability to undergo cellular differentiation enables embryos to develop specialized tissues and organs necessary for survival after birth or hatching.
None of them...they all are examples of adaptation.
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.
Blood transports oxygen nutrients and wastes in mammals and fish .
P. P. Gambaryan has written: 'How Mammals Run' -- subject(s): Anatomy, Animal locomotion, Biological Adaptation, Locomotion, Mammals, Adaptation (Biology)
Upright gait. Firstmate
Becoming cold-blooded
Yes, mammals have villi. An example is the villi in the intestines of humans which help to absorb nutrients.
No mammals eat logs. However, beavers and porcupines chew on logs to eat the bark and soft fibers between the bark and the wood. Mammals cannot break down the cellulose of wood.
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