Please define "maturity" here. Are you asking about sexual maturity (or when a bull reaches puberty) or carcass maturity, or when a bull reaches the point where he is no longer putting down muscle but fat instead.
For both and either or, it really depends on the breed of the young 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.
They are generally known as bulls, which are intact males used to breed cows and heifers. Steers (being castrated males) don't exactly mature, as they may keep growing even after the age of maturity for both bulls and cows, though more slower than when they were young.
The meat from mature cattle (bulls and cows) is beef.
Calves are offspring of mature cows and bulls.
A young bull refers to a male bovine that is under four years old. At this age, bulls are still developing physically and sexually, and they are often kept separate from mature bulls to prevent aggressive behavior. Young bulls are commonly raised for beef production or breeding purposes.
Mature cows will weigh an average of 1,250 lbs and mature bulls will weigh approximately 2,000 lbs.
Bulls can become oxen when they get castrated and are trained to pull carts, wagons, plows, etc. However most breeding bulls stay bulls, and oxen are trained at a young age, when they are castrated when they are on their mommas and not yet trained as oxen.
Nothing.
Yes. They have live young
Mature Pinzgauer bulls weigh 2000 pounds and up. Females are approx. 1000 to 1600 pounds when mature.
Explain the difference between young and mature mountains?
The bulls are noticeably larger than the cows, and when mature, the horns of the bulls are also larger than the horns of the cows.