The moose may feel comfort in a herd.
Moose normally never live in a herd, they are solitary animals. However a cow with a couple of her calves would form a herd, but that's as big as a moose herd would ever get.
Depending on the amount, if there are many moose, it is indeed a herd.
The usual animal group, or collective noun, that applies to cows would be a herd (of cattle). Female moose are called cows, too, and a group of moose is called a herd as well. Female whales are also called cows, so another applicable collective noun would be a pod (of whales).
as many as there is in a herd.
A group of cattle is called a herd.
"of a herd of cattle led by ranchers" as you have used it above is already the possessive for of "a herd of cattle led by ranchers"! For example: The herd of cattle which was led by the ranchers bought a farm. The farm is now owned by the herd. It is the herd's farm. It is the farm of the herd of cattle led by ranchers.
The collective noun for moose is a herd of moose.
The correct homophone in this instance is herd."Did you see the herd of cattle?"
the literary term for multiple moose, or the plural of moose, is moose. e.g I have a herd of moose. it sounds alot better then I have a herd of mooses. so the plural is moose.
Arer herd and cattle the same thing?
A "head" of cattle is just another way of saying herd of cattle. Instead of saying I have 100 herd of cattle, you would say I have 100 head of cattle (this way you are specifying the exact number of cows you have in your herd)
no that would be silly batata heads