Draw the diagram of the system of ruminating
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Answer:
Quick facts
Ruminant stomachs have four compartments: the rumen, the reticulum, the omasum and the abomasum.
Rumen microbes ferment feed and produce volatile fatty acids, which is the cow’s main energy source. Rumen microbes also produce B vitamins, vitamin K and amino acids.
In calves, the esophageal grooves allows milk to bypass the rumen and directly enter the abomasum. Rumen development occurs following a change in diet and microbial growth.
The digestive tract of the adult cow

The cow’s digestive tract
Explanation:
The digestive tract of the adult cow

The cow’s digestive tract
Calf digestive system
The rumen, reticulum and omasum remain undeveloped at birth and during the first few weeks of life. The calf’s largest stomach compartment is the abomasum. At this stage of life, the rumen doesn’t function and thus some feeds that mature cows can digest, calves can not.
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Esophageal groove
Rumen development
James Linn, former Extension educator; Donald Otterby, College of Food, Agriculture and Natural Resource Sciences; W. Terry Howard and Randy Shaver, University of Wisconsin; Michael Hutjens, University of Illinois; Lee Kilmer, Iowa State University
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Answer:
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Explanation:
swallow half chewed grass quickly and store it in a part of their stomach is called a rumen
Here, the food gets partially digested , which is called cud.when the animals are not eating ,the cud return to the mouth in small lumps and chewed again . this process is called rumination