It is referred to as dehorning.
yes cows do use their horns for fighting
Since cows ARE female, yes they are apt to have horns.
Many farm animals have horns. Those animals include: Cows Bulls Goats Rams Certain sheep Deer (a male is called a stag, the one with horns) Moose
No, Jersey cows are typically polled, meaning they do not have horns naturally. However, occasionally, some Jersey cows may develop small horn-like structures called scurs.
Yes. Some don't have horns though; they are called polled Freisian cattle.
No all cattle of any sex can grow horns. It is not limited to males like deer to have the ability to grow horns.
There are black and white cows that have horns. The most commonly known dairy cattle that is black and white is the Holstein breed. All Holsteins are born with the genetics to grow horns. However, majority of cows, as calves, are dehorned days after birth.
they have horns
Yes.
The horns are a defense against predators - when threatened, cows form a circle with their tails in the center and their heads out. The cows all lower their heads to put the horns between the predator and the rest of the cows. Cows can use their horns to gore wolves, coyotes, mountain lions and other large predators to death.
Yes. Both bulls and cows can have horns. Whether a particular sex has horns or not is a very poor method of telling whether a bovine is male or female.
This is an ambiguous question because there are over 900 breeds of cattle in the world, and there are a few breeds where all cows (AND bulls) are horned, but all others have cows that are horned. There really is no "kind" or "type" of cow that has horns.