No, they cannot because their chromosomes are different.
The proper term is "cow moose," just like the term "bull" in used for male moose as "bull moose."
To produce offspring for the next generation, because no bovine lives forever.
A donkey and a cow are two different species. They cannot produce offspring. If a donkey were to persue a cow, it is a form of dominance behavior. He cannot sire calves or foals from the cow.
A moose cow is a female moose, which moose are a part of the deer family. However, the deer family (Cervids) are distantly related to the bovine family, under the Family Bovidae.
Yes, if the cow moose strikes the wolf with the hooves or knocks the wolf with its head. A cow moose protecting its young from an enemy is more fierce than a bull moose on the rut.
The cross that will produce only horned Roan offspring in cattle is the red bull with the white cow. However, these offspring would be able to create either red, white, or Roan.
tasty
Because she's a mammal, and when she gives birth to offspring she produces milk for that offspring to live off of for the next few months of its life.
A cow moose
no
No, the male moose (bull) does not stay with the female moose (cow)
She is called a cow and the male is called a bull