Bear calves could be referred to those calves that have such thick fluffy hair that they look like little bears with four legs; these are often referred to yak calves, Highland calves, or Galloway calves, all of which are born with thick long hair.
The term could be a mis-spelling of "bare calves" which may be those calves that are orphaned and are raised in a bottle or bucket by humans.
no, it can't
A polar bear looks for a young muskox that is away from the group of muskox. If it cannot, the polar bear would usually attack and kill an injured or a weak adult. A polar bear would not attack a healthy muskox.
Possibly, but in most cases a bear would get injured than killed if it messed with a cow moose, especially one that has some calves to protect.
Black bears will prey on deer, elk and moose calves, livestock like bovine calves, foals, chickens and pigs, humans (if they're hungry enough), and males will even kill and eat offspring of black bear sows.
There are actually six books in The Clan of The Cave Bear Saga.The Clan of the Cave BearThe Valley of the HorsesThe Mammoth HuntersThe Plains of PassageThe Shelters of StoneThe Land of Painted Calves
No. The "safety in numbers" logic of the herd mentality is obvious, here, as cows will move their calves away from the threat of predation, as the bulls will face off with the bear to ultimately chase the bear away.
Mainly wolves (actively hunting as a pack of wolves), or a bear (several species) who would kill a calf if they could get close enough.
Calves that are dark red. These can be Saler calves, Red Poll calves, or a commerical mix-bred calf.
Yes calves are mammals.
They stay calves
i like calves
My calves burned after my run. Those calves are two months old.