Artificial intelligent assistant

Diet of free-range herbivores Giving minimal credence to estimates in popular media of the average biomass of insects/arachnids, etc. in an acre of land, it seems that a "free-range" cow (I don't mean to pick on cows) might be something of an omnivore. Is there any evidence that herbivores derive essential parts of their diet from sources other than cellulose? Or that they do not?

One key nutrient worth thinking about in the context of this question is vitamin B12. Herbivores such as cows and sheep will derive this directly from the bacteria in their rumen. Rabbits produce two types of feces - soft and hard - and they eat the soft variety, rich in gut bacteria, as a source of nutrients like vitamin B12. Gorillas are primarily herbivores, but are thought to derive their vitamin B12 from insects, eaten purposefully or inadvertently.

So yes, herbivores derive this particular nutrient from non-plant sources.

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