The salivary glands in a mature cow are approximately three feet long. The have a capacity of two gallons. A mature cow can produce up to fifty quarts of saliva each day.
I'm not sure.. but I think those are: Salivary Glands Gastric Glands Bile Glands Pancreatic Glands Intestinal Glands
Yes. How else do you expect them to chew cud like they do? If they didn't have salivary glands they wouldn't be able to rechew their food to break it down more.
The major salivary glands are located around the lower maxilla in both humans and fetal pigs. These are used to generate saliva.NEWThe major salivary glands are the parotid, submandibular, and sublingual glands. They secrete saliva into your mouth; the parotid through tubes that drain saliva, called salivary ducts, near your upper teeth, submandibular under your tongue, and the sublingual through many ducts in the floor of your mouth.
The 3 sets of salivary glands are as follows: parotid is the largest and is located near the poll (poll is the place right behind the ears.) submaxillary is located in the jaw. sublingual is located under the tongue.
The thymus glands
Salivary glands are exocrine glands.
The salivary glands in the mouth produce saliva.
There are about 600 to 1,000 minor salivary glands.
No. Salivary glands are close to the Pharynx.
Humans have paired salivary glands.
There are three big pairs of salivary glands in addition to many smaller ones. The parotid glands, submandibular glands and sublingual glands are the large, paired salivary glands.
salivary amylase
salivary glands donot digest salivary amylase converts starch to glucose
I think it is the Stomach, Salivary Glands, Pancreas, Small Intestine :)
Salivary glands.
The salivary glands are incapable of speech and cannot describe their location.
pituitary glands salivary glands