Nothing. They can't hybridize.
Yes.
A holstein cow.
Cattle and true buffalo cannot mate, as the embryos fail. A hybrid between the American Bison and domestic Cattle is called a Beefalo.
Most likely, yes. Did you know that there's a breed called a Beefalo? This breed is a result of breeding an American bison with a domestic cow. So if an American bison can be bred with a domestic bovine and produce viable offspring, then there's nothing wrong with breeding an African Buffalo with a domesticated cow. Make sure, though, that you breed an African Buffalo cow with a domestic-bred bull that has good calving-ease numbers.
If you're referring to bison as "buffalo," yes, the resulting calf would be called an F1 beefalo calf.However, if you were referring to the true buffalo such as the African Cape Buffalo and Asian Water Buffalo, no.
Yes, they are called a "cow buffalo" and, just like a male, it is called a "bull buffalo".
mr. buffalo
That all depends on what buffalo you are referring to: American bison, African Cape buffalo or Wild/Domestic Asian Water Buffalo?The scientific name for a domestic cow is Bos primigenius. For the American bison, it is Bison bison. For African Buffalo, it's Syncerus caffer. For Wild Asian Water Buffalo: Bubalus arnee, and for Domestic Wild Asian Water Buffalo it is Bubalus bubalus.
No.
Both. Buffalo is the name of a species of large ungulate animal related to the domestic bovine or "cow". There are both males (bulls) and females (cows) of the buffalo species, be it African Cape or Asian Water.
camel, buffalo, cow
Absolutely! It's a little richer than "normal" cow's milk, but it's no different from drinking milk from a dairy cow, especially if the buffalo cow is trained to be milked, like a lot of Asian buffalo are.