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A cow can have anywhere from one to 20 calves in her lifetime, depending on how productive she is and how long she is able to stay in the herd to produce those calves. On average, a cow will produce eight calves in her lifetime. Cows that are used for embryo transfer can produce up to twice as many calves in her life time than she can by her own doing. The record number of calves a cow has had in her lifetime is 39.
A female moose usually calves once per year, and has one calf at a time, twins are rare.
Cows can have one or two calves at a time. Odd time she'll give birth to triplets.
A heifer becomes a cow after she has had her first calf. In other words, you can expect 0 (zero) calves from a heifer over breeding life. When she is a cow, she may have from 1 to 18 calves in her lifetime.
A walrus can have one calf during childbirth. Over a walrus' lifetime it can have about 20 calves, about 1 every 2 to 3 years.
Wolves, deer, elk, musk, oxen, and caraabu all eat moose. (I'm "improving" the answer) Of those animals listed, only wolves eat moose. Also, grizzly bears, coyotes, (although they cannot take down an adult moose), mountain lions, and the scavenging animals, like buzzards/vultures, etc. The Moose is large enough that it doesn't have any real predators, except man, but the small calves are prey for many carnivores.
3000
4 stomachs in a moose
the moose has no toes
Moose. Mooses.
The word calves consists of a single syllable.
Woolly mammoths could have only had one calf at a time. Because of the long gestation period, a female mammoth would probably one have a few calves in her lifetime.