A cow is typically considered to be a cow once it has reached maturity and given birth to a calf. In terms of age, this usually happens around 2-3 years old for female cattle.
No. A bull is the male counterpart of a cow, not a "type" of cow. Bulls aren't cows, technically speaking.
No. Cows give birth through the VAGINA, not the anus. ALL mammals give birth through the vagina or birth canal, NEVER THE ANUS.
Yes, the bull in the cow family is responsible for mating with the cows to produce calves. Bulls provide the sperm needed for fertilization, which then results in the birth of calves.
On average it usually takes anywhere from 2 to 12 hours for a cow to "clean herself" or push out the placenta after she has calved.
When she gives birth to a calf.
A pregnant cow who gives birth is a mother.
There's a 50% chance that a cow will give birth to a bull calf. Same with heifers. Therefore the ratio is 1:1 that a cow will be mother to a bull (bull calf) or a future cow (heifer calf)
It should only be a matter of a couple hours.
A cow is typically considered to be a cow once it has reached maturity and given birth to a calf. In terms of age, this usually happens around 2-3 years old for female cattle.
Bulls also have a four-chambered stomach. Bulls are just a male version of a cow.
When caught in a brothel of bulls.
Male elephants are called bulls, females are cows.
A cow
The opposite of bulls are cows or heifers. Bulls are male, cows are female. The difference between a heifer and a cow is that a cow has been pregnant.
The placenta is supposed to be naturally expelled around 5 to 10 hours after the cow has calved.
A bull doesn't give birth because a bull is a male. The female, a cow, gives birth to the bull's offspring, and they are called calves.