There are several factors involved here: is this in winter or summer? Is the animal viewed at night or at day? If it were winter, a black cow is easier to spot than a white one. If it was summer, then a white bovine is easier to spot than a black one. At night, a white cow is easier to see than a black one, and vice versa in the day time.
For most cases, it would be a white cow. But, a spotted cow would be easier to spot if the airplane where flying over an area that is covered in snow, not a green snowless pasture.
White cattle are often the easiest to see from an airplane than black-and-white ones.
White cow.
White
No, never.
They don't. It's simply not possible. The only way a black cow can "have" a white calf is if the white calf has been adopted by that cow because her calf had died at birth and the white calf had no mother because it's mother either rejected it or died giving birth to it. It's new surrogate mother then happened to be a black cow.
A Holstein cow is a dairy cow with a large udder and has a thin hair coat that is black and white.
They don't. That has never happened before, and likely never will. When you cross a White Shorthorn cow with a Black Angus bull you will get a grey calf (this is how the Murray Grey breed came about, by the way). The same thing occurs if you put a Black Angus bull on a Charolais cow.
That all depends on the breed[s] of either the sire and the dam.Basically, though, if the black bull is Angus, and the white cow is Charolais, then the calf that results will come out grey.
It depends on the background color. If the ground is covered in snow, then a white cow would NOT be seen. I the season is summer, a cow that is camouflaged would be the hardest to see.
Think of cow color as a "commutative" property. 1 + 2 is the same as 2 + 1.
No, never.
i think in black and white
Black and white.
An embarrassed cow
Black and white.
They don't. It's simply not possible. The only way a black cow can "have" a white calf is if the white calf has been adopted by that cow because her calf had died at birth and the white calf had no mother because it's mother either rejected it or died giving birth to it. It's new surrogate mother then happened to be a black cow.
Black Baldy
yes. The color of the cow has nothing to do with the milk it produces.
An embarrassed cow
You mean a Freisian? They're just your average black-and-white milk cow.