No, because they are both the same species. They will both use the same communication.
You get strawberry milk from the pink cows, Milktonium from the green cows, chocolate milk from the brown and regular white milk from the brown and white cows.
Most white cattle you see are Charolais and Chianina cattle. Shorthorns also come in white, but are primarily red roan or red in colour. Other breeds that have white on them (or are almost all white) are British Whites and White Parks.
No, Brown cows do not have brown milk.
A brown cow gives white milk. All cows give white-colored milk, no matter what their breed or coat color. However, brown-colored breeds such as Jersey, Guernsey, and Brown Swiss, generally give creamier milk with a higher milk-fat content than black-and-white Holsteins, but usually smaller quantities.
6 if it is a regular black and white cow. Brown cows are 12 and pink cows are 18.
Holsteins are. But there are many other breeds and cross-breds that are not black and white, but instead can be all black, black with a white face, red, red with a white face, brown, yellow, tan, buckskin, blood red, orange, grey, mousy grey, etc.
The only animals on your farm that can have changing colour are cows. Cows can be born or purchased brown, white with pink spots or white with black patches.
Compared to what? Cattle with black coats? Brown coats?
There are black and white cows that have horns. The most commonly known dairy cattle that is black and white is the Holstein breed. All Holsteins are born with the genetics to grow horns. However, majority of cows, as calves, are dehorned days after birth.
Genetics. Some breeds of cattle are brown, others are a variety of other different colours. This is all a part of genetics.
Black, brown, red, white, grey, yellow, orange, and a combination of all seven.
Brown cows exist and can have various shades of brown in their coat, such as light tan, mahogany, or dark chocolate. The color of a cow's coat is determined by genetics and can vary among different breeds.