Anything from beef producers, backgrounders, stockmen, to feedlot owners.
Cattle ranchers are and always have raised (not "rise") cattle for beef, they've never began to raise cattle for products other than beef for any reason. Of course you may be referring to those ranchers who raise cattle to sell their cattle to other ranchers who need those type of cattle for their operations. Seedstock or purebred cattlemen still contribute to the beef industry, though, when they cull out cows, bulls, heifers and steered young bulls because they do not fit or are inferior to the type of stock they need to raise to sell to other seedstock producers or commercial producers.
A young male bovine is called a bull-calf. If he's a yearling he's called a yearling bull. If he has been castrated right after birth he is called a steer-calf. Upon being weaned and reaching one year of age he is called a steer. A young female bovine is called a heifer-calf. After she's weaned she's known as a heifer. At around one year of age she is commonly called a yearling heifer.
Lamb - there is no different between gender. Only when they are adults is there a difference.
The females are cows, the males are bulls and the young are calves. Just like cattle.
A young male bovine is called a bull-calf. If he's a yearling he's called a yearling bull. If he has been castrated right after birth he is called a steer-calf. Upon being weaned and reaching one year of age he is called a steer. A young female bovine is called a heifer-calf. After she's weaned she's known as a heifer. At around one year of age she is commonly called a yearling heifer.
A heifer
two
Actually a "dogie" refers to a motherless calf. In bovine terms females are called heifers until they give birth then they are cows. Male cattle are bulls unless they have been castrated then the are called steers. Steers are where most of the beef we consume comes from. Ranchers keep a number of cows depending on how much grazing land they have. A bull or two is left with the cows to ensure as many cows as possible have calves. Ideally ranchers want heifers, and young bull calves are turned into steers and then are sent to market in a year.
No such thing. Shoats are young pigs that have been weaned.
When a cow gives birth the animal is called a calf, as the calf grows the name changes depending on the sex of the animal. A female is called a hiefer and a male is called a bullock
It is simply a lamb.
Steers, steer calves, yearling bulls, bull calves, bullocks, or calves. Steers and bullocks are castrated male bovines that are castrated after birth or at weaning. Bulls are intact male bovines, and range from being calves, yearlings, or mature animals.