Because they are mammals. Female mammals, after giving birth to young, give milk for a period of time before the young are weaned. The name of these mammary-housing appendages differ for each species and type of mammal. What animals that don't have udders, like most hooved herbivorous mammals do (camels, cows, ewes, nannies, and other hooved mammals), have breasts (like in primates and humans), or just teats (sows, b!tches, queens, rodents).
The teats on the udder.
Some udders may get large due to pregnancy and lactation, where they fill with milk. Additionally, genetics, breed characteristics, and nutrition can also play a role in the size of an udder. Regular milking and proper udder care are important to maintain udder health and function.
The Udder.
The floor of the udder in a goat refers to the underside of the udder where the teats are located. It is important to keep this area clean and dry to prevent infections and maintain good udder health in the goat. Regular grooming and hygiene practices can help maintain the cleanliness of the udder floor.
A complex system of ligaments holds the udder to the abdomen.
When the cow's udder is full and heavy, it needs to be milked.
Cows only have one "breast," and that is the udder.
The udder will only swell, the cow is dropping her milk into the milk cisterns in the udder for the calf to suckle.
Generally, udder treatments are done using a teat cannula...the medication is infused into the affected quadrant(s) of the udder by sliding the cannula into the udder through the openings where milk would normally pass out during the suckling process and the medication would be pushed into the udder via syringe.
The udder, just like in a cow. The udder is stationed in the same area as a cow's, only there are just two teats, not four, on that udder.
A cow only has one udder, with four teats for each quarter of the udder.
Udder 1 three nipples and udder 2 four nipples