All kinds, actually. Beef and dairy cows, beef steers and heifers, beef and dairy bulls (young and old), and freemartin heifers of either dairy or beef breeding. Primarily, though, beef steers, young bulls (on occasion, though), and beef heifers unsuited for the breeding herd due to factors like temperament, comformation, size/weight, mothering ability, etc., are in feedlots on a "finishing" ration for three to four months prior to slaughter.
Yes. Cows and horses are commonly found on rangelands, especially beef cattle (no, not the "cows" that are in feedlots, but actual beef cows), not so much dairy cattle.
no it is not mean to put cattle in feedlots as long as the farmer takes care of them
No steroids are given to dairy cows.
The collective noun for cows (of any kind) is a herd of cows or a herd of jersey cows.
Cows make milk from eating grass.
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R. I. Lipper has written: 'Pollution from animal feedlots' -- subject(s): Feedlots, Pollution, Water
They are raised on either family farms or feedlots.
Cattle.
They can be. But the cows use their tails for flyswatters, so it would be kind of mean.
Milk gets evaporated afterwords; cows don't evaporate it.
Whitebait is a kind of fish.