To the best of current scientific knowledge, no, but this has been identified as an area of concern and any offspring of a confirmed BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy) case in a female cow are also tested to verify the prion was not transmitted during pregnancy.
Calves learn things from what their mother does and teaches them to do as well as what they gain from their own experiences.
its mother milk
Chlamydia is a sexually transmitted disease that can cause pneumonia or conjunctivitis in a baby born to a mother with the infection.
Kennedy's Disease is inherited through the X chromosome, and since males only have one X chromosome inherited from their carrier mother, they are usually affected while females are usually carriers
Mother of Disease was created in 1998.
Good question but i dont have a clue
Calves suckle from their mother's udder, which is the organ where milk is generated and obtained by the calf or the milk machine (if the cow's a dairy cow).
If it is a group of calves born from different mothers than you call them a herd of calves or a group of calves. If it is two calves born at the same time from the same mother than they are twins, just the same as human offspring would be called.
Cows produce calves. Calves, like all other baby mammals, rely on their mother's milk for nutrition. Thus, in order to satisfy this need, cows need to produce milk for their calves.
Usually one calf per cow. Occasionally one cow may have enough milk to feed two calves, but dairy nurse cows can have as many as four calves suckling from her.
A young calf will bawl to find his mother if he lost her and cannot see her. He will bawl if he is hungry, if he doesn't have a mother right there to serve him. He will even bawl in play with other calves. At weaning time, he will bawl constantly for his mother because he either needs her to be by his side to comfort him or for milk, or both.
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most common infection that can be transmitted to a fetus.