Steeleye Span sang the spotted cow
Cock a doodle moo
Some, but not all. Spotting in cattle is a recessive trait and is kept by breeding spotted with spotted, regardless if a bull is bred to his daughters or a cow is bred to an unrelated bull. See the related link below for more info.
The subject of the sentence is cow (cow was grazing).
The Wonder Stuff
Umm.. no. unless there spotted then yes, but there not..so no.
It's harder to spot a cow that is more solid coloured than one that is spotted with black and white or brown and white. The white can be picked up by the eye much faster than an all-black, all-brown or all-grey cow.
prairie dogs
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.
prairie dogsprairie dogs still live on prairiesprairie dogs, cow bird, spotted lizard
A Normal Spotted Cow - Normal Milk - Gift, Buy, and Adoption A Brown Cow - Brown Milk - Adoption Only A Pink Cow - Strawberry Milk - Adoption Only (added by ttashababy-) A Holstein Cow- not sure what kind of milk- Adpt. only A Green Alien Cow- N/s- Adpt. Only A Groovy Cow- N/s- Adpt only. A Chocolate Cow (differs from above, i have both!) Chocolate milk, adpt only.
This type of inheritance is impossible and therefore does not exist in cattle, for several reasons:You cannot breed cows to cows. You can only breed cows to bulls and vice versa. A cow is a mature female bovine that has had at least one or two calves. A bull is a male bovine (most often mature) that is used to breed cows in order to produce calves or, in your case, "babies."You cannot get the spotted inheritance from breeding a (supposedly) sold white bull/cow to a solid cow/bull. Cattle genetics suggest a much more likelier occurrence of getting a grey calf from this cross due to the strong dilution gene present in all cattle that are white or light-coloured.Solid to solid gets solid. Solid is dominant over spotted and thus will never occur when breeding solid to solid, ever. You will only get spotted (and only a small chance, at that) offspring if both parents are heterozygous for spotting or either one of them may be spotted themselves, which is obviously not the case in this question.A cow will more often than not give birth to one "baby" or calf, not several.If this type of inheritance did exist, it would be incomplete dominance or codominance.However, note that this inheritance (same type as mentioned above) does exist in Shorthorn cattle, where when you breed a solid red bull (or cow) to a solid white cow (or bull), you will have a high chance of getting a calf that is a roan colour, or to many who do not know what "roan" really means, a "spotted" red and white calf.But really, breeding a white bull to a black cow (or white cow to black bull) will give you a 100% chance of getting a grey calf. All calves, for example, as a result from breeding a Charolais bull to a herd Angus cows, will come out grey, not spotted black and white.
I know they sang Jerusalem but im not sure what else.