Yes, but not as a waste gas during exhalation. Atmospheric air breathed in by the cow is ~21% oxygen. The cow can remove up to about 5% oxygen, so when exhaling the air from the lungs is about 16% oxygen.
Another opinion:When exhaled, oxygen binds with carbon to form carbon dioxide, which is expelled as a "waste" gas. So in a way, yes cows do release oxygen when breathing, but not in the O2 form we are familiar with that is in the atmosphere and what plants expel during the process of photosynthesis.Cows need a nose to breathe. They eat a lot of grass with their mouths so they use their nose to breathe.
They don't fart out of there mouths only there butt which realease methane!
Twelve cows can be called a flink, a dozen head or a herd of cows.
Cows were not invented.
No, the average cow can swim a bit, but not long term or underwater. They are mammals, breathe with lungs, and are not adapted for aquatic life. There is another mammal, however, that is. It is called a manatee, and is nicknamed the sea cow. They do not really look like cows, but they are large, gentle, and usually slow moving. The Greeks had a myth of an animal called ophiotaurus. The front half was a cow, but the back half was a sea serpent. In more modern fantasy, there are mercows. They are much like merpeople, except the top is a cow instead of a person.
Yes, but in the form of carbon dioxide, with contains two atoms of oxygen and one of carbon. Cows don't breathe out the pure form of oxygen; they breathe in oxygen as well as nitrogen from the atmosphere.
Cows need a nose to breathe. They eat a lot of grass with their mouths so they use their nose to breathe.
Cows can't survive on gas alone. Neither can humans. Both cows and humans need food and water to survive, not just oxygen (which is a gas we breathe).
Because there mammal's and therefor can only breathe above water
They don't fart out of there mouths only there butt which realease methane!
Cows are ruminants and have an active microbial population in their guts which releases methane. They also release some nitrogen from swallowed air, water vapour, and carbon dioxide.
No, PLANTS release oxygen when they breathe. Cows, like humans, release CARBON DIOXIDE when they exhale.
That depends on what type of organism you're talking about. Fish don't have lungs, but mammals, eg. cows, dogs and people, need lungs to breathe. So yes they are essential if you want to breathe air like a mammal, reptile or bird, but not if you have gills like a fish.
The respiratory rate is generally higher in fish compared to cows. Fish utilize gills to extract oxygen from water, leading to a rapid and continuous respiratory rate to meet their oxygen demands. In contrast, cows, being mammals, have a lower respiratory rate as they breathe air through lungs, which allows for more efficient gas exchange at a slower rate.
Livestock effects the environment because when the cows and cattle poop, their poop releases a chemical oxide that harms the grass and plants that are letting us breathe and so on
Angus cows are beef cows, not dairy cows. Holsteins are dairy cows, not beef cows, which is where we get the majority of our milk from.
COWS COWS COWS they eat cows.