Yes if they happen to be standing at the time.
No not usually
Only once.
Cattle drives typically occur in the spring and fall, depending on the region and climate, as these seasons are optimal for moving cattle to greener pastures or to market. In the spring, drives often head to summer grazing lands, while in the fall, they may return for winter shelter. The timing also aligns with traditional ranching practices and the availability of resources for both cattle and cowboys.
They become feral or join another local herd or die.
Yes. When this happens cattle can get heat stroke or heat exhaustion, and, just like with humans, they can die from it.
rain?
In the winter they can die of the cold. And in the summer they can die of dehydration or heat stroke.
Respiratory diseases such as BRD (Bovine Respiratory Disease which covers shipping fever and pneumonia) is the most common disease that cattle die from. Digestive diseases come in second.
Plainer cattle refer to cattle that are in average condition in terms of body condition score. If we use the American scoring system of 1 to 9, 1 being the most emaciated, plainer cattle are those that fall in between a body condition score of around 5: not too fat, nor too thin.
As the Maple is deciduous it's leaves fall in the Autumn, but the tree does not die.
They don't always die; it depends on the hight and impact of the fall also your mass
u can die because if its a big earthquake buildings and such fall and could fall on u?!!!!!!!