A bull's penis is needing to be protected by a sheath, just like in all other mammals (except human males). When the bull is about to breed, the penis comes out when the bull gets an erection just before he inserts himself into the cow. A bull's penis is controlled by flexture muscles inside his body which controls erection and exposure of the bull's penis.
Cows can be bred at any age (since they are mature female bovines that have had at least 2 calves) so long as they are not already pregnant. Bulls, on the other hand, can begin to be used for breed by the time they are around 12 months of age.
Steaks can come from both cows and bulls. But most often steaks come from steers and heifers, as cows and bulls tend to have too-strong-tasting meat to be used in steaks. Instead, they're best used as hamburger and sausages.
Male cows don't exist. There are only cows and bulls, no female cows, male cows, male bulls, female bulls. With that said, only cows (which are, by definition, mature female bovines that have given birth to at least one calf) are ones that have cervixes, bulls do not. Bulls have their major reproductive organs close to or mostly outside their body, cows have theirs inside.
Yes they do because all cows are girls and all bulls are boys
Because they can produce more calves in one breeding season than a cow can. One bull can breed up to 50 cows in a natural breeding setting; in a laboratory environment, his sperm can breed many more ovums taken from different cows!!
Yes. Bulls are intact male bovines used to breed cows and heifers. Bulls are not female, nor ever will be.
Where other brahman cows and cattle live of course.
Limousin cattle originated from France, specifically from the Limousin and Marche regions. Locally, though, Limousin cattle come from other Limousin cattle, specifically cows and bulls that are of the Limousin breed.
If you are referring to animals of the same breed and age as the other, generally bulls are the largest of the two.
No. Bulls are supposed to breed cows, not kill them.
To breed the cows. Bulls, when it is time to cull them, are then turned into beef.
This is a very strange question, because no matter what breed a cow or bull is, they are going to stay that breed and that sex no matter what. Also, a breed is one that is defined by certain physical characteristics such as size, coat colouration, and genetics, but never by sex or gender. For example, the Hereford breed cannot be a breed without both Hereford cows and bulls. These cows and bulls were born as Herefords, they never suddenly or magically became Hereford cows or bulls when they reached a certain size or age. The same goes for all other breeds of cattle. Looking at the question again, it seems you are asking what animal breeds have sexes named "cows" and "bulls" in them. The answer to that is bovines (cows/cattle) and buffalo.
No, because it depends on the breed. For instance, the Holstein breed, which is primarily a dairy breed, has both males (bulls and steers) and females (cows and heifers) that are black-and-white. Check out the related question below for a list of breeds that also come in black-and-white.
No. And for your information, cows don't have penises because they are female mature bovines. Bulls have penises, not cows. And no, a bull's penis is not bigger than a stallion's.
Cows can be bred at any age (since they are mature female bovines that have had at least 2 calves) so long as they are not already pregnant. Bulls, on the other hand, can begin to be used for breed by the time they are around 12 months of age.
Beef products come from cows! From the bodies of cattle, cows, bulls etc, etc,
Cows are cattle, as they are females only, while bulls are male cattle. Therefore, you cannot say for certain which is larger as one is a grouping, the other a specific gender of the species. Bulls are usually larger than cows, especially if referring to cows and bulls of the same breed, and not between breeds.