When cows get pneumonia it can be passed to other cows.
Yes. It is recommended to quarantine affected cattle to a separate area until they are better and you have treated them with the proper antibiotics.
No.
In 1898 it was discovered in cows, and in 1938 it was found in humans.
Other animals that eat grass are grasshoppers, cows, horse's and that's all peace out
Horse cows do not exist.
cows CAN eat horse pellets, but it is not good for their digestive system. I wouldn't recommend trying it...
NO, it is NOT contagious. Mastitis is not a disease that is spread around by direct or indirect contact. It's an infection of the udder that is caused by bacteria entering the teat canal into the cavity of one or more quarters of the udder, or by injury when a full udder is bumped and bruised excessively. It cannot be spread from cow to cow like other illnesses can. Mastitis is not caused by a pathogen that spreads through contact from other cows or through other vectors like flies, airborne, or feed equipment. That is why cows with mastitis are not quarantined, because it is not necessary to quarantine them, particularly milk cows. Beef cows may need to be quarantined to have their infected quarter(s) milked out twice a day, but it is not because the illness is contagious.
their were cows, mules, sheep, pig, and horse
It depends on the horse, actually. If the horse is mild tempered and not overly bossy to a cow, then yes. But sometimes cows and horse would rather stick with their own kind than "like" each other.
That depends on how long the horse has been with the herd of cattle, and how accustomed (or not) it is to the cow herd. If the horse has been with the herd all its life, no. If it's only been with the cows for a short time, yes.
They herd cows and people ride them.
yes, because when a horse does a poo, the grass is too sweet around that area but it is not too sweet for the other animals! horses can also live with cows.
2
Other cows