No, cow chips and manure are not the same thing. Cow chips are dried cow dung used as fuel, while manure is fresh or decomposed animal waste used as fertilizer.
sugar cane, wood chips, cow manure
Cow manure is a fertilizer. The bacteria in the cow manure are the decomposers.
Cow manure does not exist in twinkies. Twinkies are primarily made of a form of corn-derivative, but definitely not cow manure.
Cow manure is "le fumier" (masc.) in French.
Synonyms: buffalo chips, compost, cow chips, dung, guano, humus, manure, maul, mulch, peat moss, plant food, potash, top dressingCompost, Manure, Mulch, Peat Moss, Potash, Buffalo/ Cow Chips, Dung, Guano, Humus, Plant Food :]
It is cow excrements, aka poop.
Cow $|-| I ±
Depends on the cow.
Methane
yes
Steers are male cattle castrated before sexual maturity and raised for beef. While they are being raised, they generate plenty of digestive waste - manure (although the manure is usally also mixed with the bedding material spread in the stalls where the steers are kept and which the manure lands on). Fortunately this manure is very useful for fertilizing soil and thus is collected and sold to those who want to use it to enrich their soil with the nutrients and plant materials contained in the manure - thus helping to offset the cost of raising the steers. Some other common terms for manure are: cow dung, cow pies, cow chips, organic fertilzer, and muck
No.