Science, asked by mandal50, 3 months ago

write short notes Milk production​

Answers

Answered by babydoll57
1

Answer:

Cows are milked using vacuum cups which are attached to the cow's teats. The milk is sent through stainless steel pipes to large refrigerated vats, then stored at 5°C or less. Within 48 hours, milk is taken in tankers to a milk factory where it's pasteurised and homogenised.

Answered by anushka220307
5

Milk is a complex food that contains vital nutrients for the bodies of young mammals. Milk is the only food of the mammal during the first period of its life and the substances in milk provide energy and antibodies that help protect against infection. For humans, milk and dairy products make a significant contribution to meeting our bodies’ needs for calcium, magnesium, selenium, riboflavin, vitamin B12 and pantothenic acid (vitamin B5) and therefore play a key role in our development.

THE ORIGINS OF MILK PRODUCTION

Today’s dairy animals are the product of thousands of years of breeding of untamed animals that lived at different altitudes and latitudes, at times exposed to severe and extreme weather conditions. The techniques used in the production of milk using cows, goats, sheep and buffaloes began around six thousand years ago. The same species of animals are kept for milking today. These herbivorous animals were the natural choice to satisfy humans’ need for food and clothing as they are less dangerous and easier to handle than carnivorous animals. The animals used for milk production are ruminants that eat quickly, in great quantities, and later digest their food.

Today, the most widespread milking animal in the world is the cow. The cow can be found on all continents around the world. Other animals commonly used in both subsistence and industrial dairy farming are goats, sheep and buffaloes. The milk of these animals is of great importance to rural communities as a source of high-quality protein and other constituents. Sheep and goats are of exceptional importance in areas such as the Mediterranean and in large areas of Africa and Asia. The number of sheep and goats in the world is in the billions and they are the most numerous of all milk- and meat-producing animals. The contribution of sheep and goats to milk and meat production in the poorest areas is also considerable: Both animals are a cheap source of food and are mainly kept in conditions where climatic, topographical, economic, technical or sociological factors limit the development of more sophisticated protein production systems.

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