Elementary principles of agriculture; a text book for the common schools . elementaryprinci00ferg Year: 1908 234 Elementary Principles of Agriculture muscles which break This is greatly aided swallow. 326. Herbivorous usually be eaten in needed nutrients. In is not only of a great chambered stomach. up the food eaten by the fowls, by the sharp gravel which fowls Animals. Vegetable food must greater quantity to furnish the herbivorous animals the intestine length, but often has a large and furnishing a large laboratory Fig. 159. Stomachs of some tlomestic animals. I, Crop and gizzard of fow


Elementary principles of agriculture; a text book for the common schools . elementaryprinci00ferg Year: 1908 234 Elementary Principles of Agriculture muscles which break This is greatly aided swallow. 326. Herbivorous usually be eaten in needed nutrients. In is not only of a great chambered stomach. up the food eaten by the fowls, by the sharp gravel which fowls Animals. Vegetable food must greater quantity to furnish the herbivorous animals the intestine length, but often has a large and furnishing a large laboratory Fig. 159. Stomachs of some tlomestic animals. I, Crop and gizzard of fowl. A, oesophagus; B, glandular stomach; C, gizzard. II. Interior of horse stomach showing the two kinds of lining. A, left sac with tough white lining; B, right sac with soft red lining where the digestive juices are secreted; E, duodenum. III. Stomach of ox as seen from right upper race (Chauveau), and IV, Stomach of sheep with second, third and fourth divisions open. A, oesophagus; B' right portion, and B' left portion of rumen of first stomach; C, reticulum; D, omasum; E, abomasum, or true stomach; F, duodenum.


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