For life.
Because it isn't a cow-herd
At least ONE bull along with other cows and maybe some heifers. The herd of a cow can also be all cows or all heifers. A herd of cattle can comprise both those as well as all bulls or all steers. A cow herd does not have to have a bunch of cows with at least one bull in it.
A herd of cows or, if they're not fully matured, heifers.
I think it is that a horde wanders - it doesn't stay in one place for too long. A herd can be stationary. I'm not 100% certain of that, but that's my understanding.
Moose normally never live in a herd, they are solitary animals. However a cow with a couple of her calves would form a herd, but that's as big as a moose herd would ever get.
No. A cow or heifer in heat will stay with the herd, or rather, the herd will stick with her.
Because it isn't a cow-herd
A harem.
herd
Yes.
A herd of cows.
A herd.
It is not sure whether you are asking about national or world cattle population, or a cow herd in general. For the former, that is most impossible to answer. For the latter, a typical cow herd should have at least a 90 to 100% female herd. A 100% female cow-herd is typically bred via artificial insemination. A 90% (or 95%) female cow-herd is bred naturally by service of one bull per 20 to 50 cows.
At least ONE bull along with other cows and maybe some heifers. The herd of a cow can also be all cows or all heifers. A herd of cattle can comprise both those as well as all bulls or all steers. A cow herd does not have to have a bunch of cows with at least one bull in it.
A herd of cows or, if they're not fully matured, heifers.
The fawn will run with the herd until it is a year old if it is a male.Then the lead buck will drive the little guy away. If the fawn is a female it can stay all its life with the herd.
A homophone for coward is "cow herd."