Yes.
Angus bulls are first opportunity breeders - when a cow is in heat and receptive, the bull will mate.
Yes they do because all cows are girls and all bulls are boys
Whenever a cow or heifer is sexually receptive.
Males are always ready to mate but the female is the one you should pay attention for the period she can mate. Females will fight a male dog if they are not ready to mate.
The more experienced bulls will. And usually yes, though sometimes if there's more than one bull around...
No. Bull Hippos fight each other to decide who gets to mate with the cow hippos. When the baby is born the mother is careful to keep it away from the bulls, as they will kill it in order to make the cow ready to mate again. The next time the cow may well mate with a different bull.
Yes. However the more inexperienced bulls may decide to stick with only one cow. But if there's a herd of more than a hundred, then a bull certainly has his work cut out for him!
Testosterone makes bulls bulls. It is responsible for the production of spermatozoa in the testes and is the hormone that controls a bull's desire to detect and mate with cows and heifers that are receptive and ready to breed. Testosterone is produced in the testes.
no they dont because when the females (cows) are ready to mate then they attract all the males in the area (bulls). Then the most dominant male mates with the cow and this happens every year!
Bulls are male cowsWhen a bull and a cow (all cows are female)'mate' if the cow has a 'male' cow its called a 'bull'
There are a fair number of different types of bulls: - Mature bulls - Bull calves - Yearling bulls - Virgin bulls - Old bulls - Mean bulls - Heifer bulls - Big bulls - Small bulls - Weaned bull-calves - Young bulls - Herd bulls - [Insert breed here] bulls - Fighting bulls - Bad bulls - Good bulls The list goes on.