Occaisonally the media has reported a cow eating a rabbit or something. Mostly this is from a mineral deficiency, called Pika, that stems from a nitrogen deficiency in the diet, and cows that have this deficiency will turn to eating carrion or small animals to satisfy that deficiency craving.
A healthy cow that has all her mineral and vitamin requirements met will not turn carnivorous. She will be what evolution made her to be: a large, herbivorous grazer.
Because it is carnivorous!
nope! =D.....probably eats insects 0o0
Insectivores: Anteater Insectivorous Aardvark Insectivorous Mole Insectivorous Hedgehog Insectivorous Shrew Insectivorous Desman Insectivorous Tenrec Insectivorous Herbivores: Zebra Herbivorous Giraffe Herbivorous Green iguana Herbivorous Green sea turtle Herbivorous Manatee sea cow Herbivorous Dugong sea cow Herbivorous Fruit bat Herbivorous Carnivores: Lion Carnivorous Crocodile Carnivorous Barn owl Carnivorous Tiger Carnivorous Raccoon Carnivorous Eagle owl Carnivorous Eurasian big owl Carnivorous
No, they are feferred to as a sea cow, though.
No. Cows are not carnivorous, they are herbivorous. The only "prey" they have is grass and tree leaves.
Yes, I typed 'bitten by a cow' into google and got a video of someone being just that. It's in the links section of this question.
buttress roots are producers as they are plants but not carnivorous ones and therefore can be eaten by a consumer such as a cow ,sheep etc.
It has big googly eyes and it is normally black and they can grow to be about 6 centimeters
buttress roots are producers as they are plants but not carnivorous ones and therefore can be eaten by a consumer such as a cow ,sheep etc.
Well, studies show that many plants have been carnivorous, but, only one is that: The Venus FlyTrap
2,000 lbs
No It Was Not