Water intake depends on many factors including humidity and air temperature, salinity of the feed, physiological needs/stressors, size of the cow, how much milk that cow produces per milking or per day, location (as in latitude and climate), etc.
This means that numbers will vary. Some sources say two gallons, others claim as much as ten.
Lactating dairy cattle will drink 25 to 30 gallons (95 to 114 litres) of water per day (some bigger and heavier producing cows will drink up to or around 50 gallons [189 litres] per day), however, a dry dairy cow will drink 10 to 20 gallons (37 to 75 litres) of water per day.
This really depends on the salinity of the feed, the time of year, climate, weather, heat index, etc. Since milk is 98 to 99% water, most of the water a cow drinks goes into milk production in addition to the cow's bodily needs for water. Lactating cows tend to drink more water than cows that are dry.
On average, a bovine is expected to drink around 7 to 10% of its body weight per day, though this in itself is highly variable due to all sorts of factors like diet, time of year, physiological demands, humidity levels, etc.
A lactating cow, dairy or no, typically drinks around 10% of her body weight in water per day.
A lactating dairy cow typically needs 10% of her body weight in water per day.
7gallons
8 gallons
12
30 gallon
This question can be answered in three ways. It takes 1851 gallons of water to refine a barrel of crude oil. One barrel of crude oil produces 19 gallons of gasoline and 10 gallons of diesel fuel, in this respect it takes 97 gallons of water to produce a gallon of gasoline. If you combine gasoline and diesel, it takes 63 gallons of water to produce a gallon of "fuel." A total of 42 gallons of petroleum products are produced from a barrel of crude oil, in this respect it takes 44 gallons of water to produce each gallon.
It can very but you are SUPPOSED to drink a gallon a day
1 gallon to 2 gallons
They do drink water, but they can go several weeks without it.
Approx half a gallon a day is recommended.
20 gallons
Water has absolutely no calories at all. It doesn't matter how much of it you drink.
32
400 gallon
If you have a gallon, you only can have one gallon.
Horses drink about 1 gallon for every one hundred pounds, and that can double when the heat kicks in. So a half ton horse can drink 20 gallons a day in the summer heat, but will normally only drink about 10 in other weather conditions. yes! at the most horses can drink 12 gallons of water a day
the answer is a mega gallon of water