Ask Yahoo!
Ask Home - Yahoo! - Help

 Ask Yahoo!
Wednesday January 10, 2001 Previous | Next
Dear Yahoo!:
How many stomachs does a cow have?
Smily Gurl
McKinleyville, California
Dear Smily:
We moseyed on over to Yahoo!'s Cows category, where we found a few sites that appeared to have information on the anatomy of a cow.

We stopped first at Crazy for Cows and soon found our way to the site's digestion section.

We quickly learned that cows are ruminants. Most ruminants, including the cow, have four stomachs, although camels and some other ruminants have three. The first stomach chamber is called the rumen. This is the chamber in which large amounts of food are stored and softened.

After the food is processed and softened in the rumen, it is regurgitated. This substance is called the cud and is chewed again. The chewed cud goes directly to the other chambers of the stomach. In the cow, these chambers are, in order, the reticulum, omasum, and abomasum. Once the cud arrives in these chambers, additional digestion occurs.

We wanted to double-check our work, so we headed back to the top page of Yahoo! and searched on "cow stomach." We received hundreds of Google search results and clicked on a web page from the Ben & Jerry web site. The famous ice cream makers confirmed our earlier findings.

 
Related Links
·Why are barns always painted red?
·Why do our stomachs make funny sounds sometimes?
More Questions About
·Mammals
·Yahoo! Answers - Zoology
Get Ask Your Way
·Most Popular
·Yahoo! Toolbar
· View RSS Feed  add to My Yahoo!
Email this page -    Save to del.icio.us    Save to My Web    Digg This

Copyright © 2001 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Copyright/IP Policy

All information available through or in connection with Ask Yahoo! is informational only and provided "as is" without warranties, representations, or guarantees of any kind. Yahoo! disclaims any and all implied warranties respecting Ask Yahoo!. Use of Ask Yahoo! is entirely at your own risk and is not a substitute for conducting your own research.