No. The udder develops during the time the heifer, after being bred at 15 months of age (breeding age), is pregnant with calf. The udder doesn't start developing until the third trimester, when it starts filling up with milk, and is ready until the calf is born and gets up and starts suckling.
no For cattle, cow is the designation for female, which has an udder and teats. The male, the bull, like most mammals, has rudimentary nipples but no teats and no udder.
Yes, cows udders can get sunburned. Cows that have pink udders, or no pigmentation on their udders are more susceptible to getting sunburned.
No.
NO.
Udder is probably derived from 'under'. You could consider that pigs, goats, and cows all have udders.
Usually this is an indication that either the cows' udders are so full of milk that she needs to be milked immediately.
Absolutely not. Bulls are male cattle, and udders are mammary glands (or breast equivalent).
In their udders.
NO. Cows only have ONE udder, and on that udder they have four teats.
Only cows and older and/or pregnant heifers are capable of developing udders; steers, bulls and calves are not.
Cows like all mammals have breasts, they have udders, and there used to milk the cows.
That is because the cows are the mammals, thus they have mammary glands- udders.