No, they have one stomach with 3 parts. C-1, C-2, C-3.
In C-1 the esophagus empties and fermentation takes place. C-2 does the same thing as C-1 except the esophagus doesn't empty. In C-3 it acts like abomasum "True stomach" digestion takes place, food is mixed with gastric juices.
There are a few animals that have 3 stomachs. Some of the animals are llamas, camels, and other relatives of these animals.
no
No.
Cows do not have 2 stomachs. They have 1 stomach with four chambers.
There is no such animal on Earth at this time, that we know of. The animal with the most number of stomachs is the cow, which has a total of four.
There are a few animals that have 3 stomachs. Some of the animals are llamas, camels, and other relatives of these animals.
Llamas only have one stomach, but 3 compartments... they chew their cud like cows.
Llama have three stomachs so their food must pass through all three. They regurgitate their food and chew their cud like a cow.
Animals with multiple stomachs are known as ruminants. Examples of these are cattle, sheep and goats. They do not actually have multiple stomachs, but stomachs which have a number of 'compartments'. The examples given above are characterised by having four distinct sections to their stomachs, although camelids (camels, llamas, alpacas, vicunas) have a slightly different arangement and are sometimes described as having three stomachs.
No. A cow only has one stomach with four chambers. No animal has three stomachs, nor any kind of multiple stomachs. All animals only have one stomach, but select species have one stomach with multiple chambers, like cows, sheep, llamas, deer and buffalo.
Llamas did NOT originate in the United States. Llamas came from S. America
The name of the gray one on the right is Carl.The one with the red flowered hat on the left is Paul.
Three
Elongated necks. Long faces. Large "banana" ears. Two-toed feet. Short tails. Spitting. Multiple stomachs.
they don't , they have three
llamas travel about thirty miles in the day and about three miles at night so overall alot of miles
llamas travel about thirty miles in the day and about three miles at night so overall alot of miles