Such a calf is called a stillborn calf.
If a baby dies at birth, it's called "stillborn".
its called abortion ANSWER: If the baby dies in utero, it is generally miscarried.
It is not true.
infant mortality
Pythagoras dies before Archimedes was born.
Probable data: born in 287, death in 212 (before our era).
You are the one who has to keep milking her if you want to keep getting milk from her after her calf dies. Otherwise, she will begin to dry up after a few days and be completely dry after a couple weeks.
A newborn calf shouldn't go for more than an hour or two without his first milk. After a few hours or even 24 hours go by, the calf's system will be less able to absorb the immunoglobins and antibodies provided by the colostrum than he would if he nursed immediately after birth. Without milk at all, a calf may live to around 5 to 6 days before it dies of dehydration.
It depends how long the cow lives for. Normally she will have her first calf at 2 yrs of age. And 1 every year after that, until she is culled or dies.
A calf is a calf from birth to weaning. That calf is no longer a calf after weaning, but a bull (if male and intact), a steer (if castrated) or a heifer (if a female). If the calf is being used for beef, at weaning age it's called a feeder calf. A feeder become stocker steer/heifer/bull when put out on pasture, usually when it reaches around 12 months of age. The calf is called a finisher when it goes into the feedlot to be put on a "hot" ration prior to slaughter, then a slaughter bull/heifer/steer when it is sold to be slaughtered for beef. This part of the equation is primarily reserved for steers. A heifer calf is a female calf from birth. She becomes a weaned heifer when weaned, a heifer after she's gone through the weaning process, then a bred heifer when she gets pregnant for the first time. After she has had her first calf, she is called a first-calf heifer. She can also be considered a cow at this time. She will remain a cow until she dies of natural causes or illness, or is slaughtered for beef. A bull calf is a male (intact) calf from birth. He is referred to as a weanling bull when weaned, then a young bull after being weaned and is not quite a year old. He is referred to a as a yearling bull when he reaches a year old and until he turns 2 years of age. He will then be referred to as a 2-year-old bull when he reaches two. He becomes a Mature bull when he reaches full maturity by the time he's 4 to 5 years old, and remains so until he dies of natural causes or is slaughtered for beef.
All sorts of things, from some sort of genetic disorder to a virus or bacteria that the calf picked up in the womb from the cow, or from environmental conditions (from the extremely cold and wet [cold stress] to the extremely hot [heat stress]) that the calf was exposed to when born. Injury from the cow stepping on it or laying on it could also cause some serious damage to the calf. If the cow rejects her calf and he doesn't get colostrum, he could die. Malnutrition of the cow where she doesn't have enough milk or is deficient in a mineral enough that the calf dies when it's born will cause it as well. A prime example of this is selenium deficiency which causes White Muscle Disease.
i don't think anyone dies before regionals but jean,sue's sister, dies before nationals.