As in humans, cancer or tumors in animals are somewhat a function of age - young animals have very few tumors while older animals are more likely to have tumors.
If you are asking specifically about the skeletal meat of cows, pigs, sheep, goats, chickens and turkeys (the major slaughter species in the United States), tumors of this tissue are extremely uncommon. The skeletal muscle, where the major retail cuts like steaks or drumsticks come from, doesn't divide often so there are very few cancers that come from these tissues. However, the edible offal (liver, kidney, gizzard, etc.) have cells that divide routinely so the risk of cancer in these tissues is higher, although still quite rare. In the old cow slaughter plants I have worked in, my observed incidence of all cancer (of edible and inedible tissues) was about 1 in 300 to 500 animals; after observing over 1 million carcasses I have yet to see a cancer of the skeletal muscle, although I have observed lymphoma (a blood cancer) form solid tumors in the meat. These carcasses were condemned and not allowed to enter the human food chain.
The good news is, in the United States and most developed countries there is a veterinarian like myself stationed at every slaughter facility specifically to watch for disease like cancer or infections in carcasses. If we see cancer in a carcass, we carefully observe the entire carcass and tissue to see if the cancer has spread. If it hasn't (there are a number of cancers that rarely spread beyond the initial site), we have the cancer and all the lymph nodes associated with it removed and then allow the rest of the carcass (which is now cancer free) to go into human food production. However, if the cancer has spread to any other tissue, the entire carcass is condemned and not allowed to be processed for human food.
most common animals are, Cows, Chicken, Goats, and Pigs.
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Common farm animals include the cow, the horse, the pig, the sheep, the chicken, the duck, and many more.
Some common farm animals are: Cattle (beef and milk), horses, chickens, hogs or pigs. Some less common and becoming more common are: alpacas, emus, ostriches, and various animals from other countries.
Goats and llamas and pigs are most common.
You can have many animals on a farm. The common ones are pigs, cows, chickens, roosters, sheep, goats, ducks, donkeys, cats, and of course, dogs.
Pretty much the same farm animals and pets as in any other place of similar climate.
Cows and chickens are farm animals. Additional farm animals include calf and colt.
No. Marsupials are not predators of farm animals.
no, farm animals are sheep and cows
The classification of farm animals can indeed be based on their uses. Farm animals can be classified as product producers.
They used tools such as bows and arrows to hunt. They also used seeds to farm plants and grow crops. They used water to survive and the flesh of animals to eat.