Most cattle of European origin have their sweat glands in their noses. Brahman, Nelore, Guzerat, Afrikan and other long-eared loose-skinned breeds of the subspecies Bos taurus indicushave sweat glands in their skin and noses.
Sweat glands on an Angus is located in the nose.
Cows sweat through their noses because that is where there sweat glands are. These are just a few of the only sweat glands a cow has.
They have no sweat glands and to keep cool they roll around on the ground and roll in their own excrement.
Mice do not have sweat glands, so no they do not sweat. They cool off by dilating the blood vessels in their tail and ears and slow metabolism.
sweat glands
Scotland.
No. The production of milk is not related to how sweat is created and excreted via sweat-glands. The udder is not even made up of sweat glands in the first place!
Cows sweat through their noses because that is where there sweat glands are. These are just a few of the only sweat glands a cow has.
sudoiferous glands
No, I don't think so. If they could sweat then they'd be drinking a heck of a lot of water. Most European cattle don't have the sweat glands in their skin like the Brahman-type cattle do. However they can sweat through their noses, as you often see beads of water on their noses when it is warm out.
No, they have sweat glands
Only mammals have sweat glands. Dinosaurs were reptiles, so they did not have sweat glands.
There are 250,000 sweat glands in a pair of feet.
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.
Sweat glands are found in the skin.
Well sudoriferous glands are sweat glands. They include the Eccrine sweat glands also known as the merocrine sweat glands, Apocrine sweat glands, Ceruminous glands and mammary glands.
Sweat glands releases sweat and oil glands release oil, other wise they are both glands
In the sweat glands.