A list of 950+ purebred cattle types are at the Link. These do not include cross breeds. These cows may be generally regarded as being either meat, dairy or mixed purpose.
No. Black Angus cows are all black. You can only get black cows with white faces if they have a sire as a Hereford or traditional Simmental. These cows are called "black baldies" and should never considered as purebred Angus because they are not purebred at all: they are crossbreds.
The collective noun for cows (of any kind) is a herd of cows or a herd of jersey cows.
You can't buy his jersey, cause you are not purebred enough. You have to deserve that jersey.
Because the genotype of a purebred for some traits are known since the genepool for these types of organisms can be so small. usually though people use homozygotes to test cross, and not purebred organisms.
A website about Jersey cows.
75%
Only if she's a dairy cow, like a Holstein or Jersey or some sort of dairy cross, like Holsetin-Jersey cross or Swiss-Jersey or Swiss-Holstein cross. Those type of cows can nurse up to four calves at once, with one calf on each tit. A beef cow or beef-dairy cross cow will not be able to feed three calves at once, only one; dairy-beef cross cows may be able to get away with feeding two at the most; occasionally three if she's a high-producing cow for a beef-dairy cross.
Cross Pollination
an animal with purebred parents of two different breeds.
A suffolk cross is as the name implys, a sheep that has a suffolk as one of its parents. The one parent is a purebred suffolk and the other parent can be anything. It could be a purebred of another breed or a mix.
Yes they do x