I can think of three immediately beside the domestic bovine; elephants, whales, and elk.
Others not listed include moose, bison, wildebeast, yaks, manatees, caribou/reindeer, rhinocerous, and hippopotamus.
Calves are offspring of mature cows and bulls.
Baby tamaraws are known as calves. Males are known as bulls and females are known as cows. Tamaraws are dwarf buffaloes.
Baby tamaraws are known as calves. Males are known as bulls and females are known as cows. Tamaraws are dwarf buffaloes.
Baby cows are calves, can calves are only calves until they are one year old. Up to then they are known as yearlings. Females reach maturity at 3 to 4 years of age and are known as cows, and males reach maturity at the same age and are known as bulls. Cattle are NOT babies when they are 6 years of age!!
Bull calves. When they are weaned and/or reach around 10 months of age they are referred to as bulls or young bulls.
Not necessarily. It means cattle in a collective term, not cows as in only cows with calves, or dry cows or pregnant cows or bulls or steers or heifers or whatever. When a cattleman says that he has 50 head of cattle, he means cows, bulls, steers, heifers and calves, not just the cows themselves.
Male elephants are called bulls, females are cows.
The females are cows, the males are bulls and the young are calves. Just like cattle.
No, "camel" is a generic term, female camels are called cows, male camels are called bulls and their young are known as calves.
None. Bulls don't "have" babies. But they can make calves by breeding a cow or two. Or more. The average offspring that a bull can sire can range from 10 to 50 calves in a breeding season. Of course this depends on the cows' ability to settle when bred and not abort.
Yes. Bulls do the same things as cows do, except produce milk and give birth to calves.
Elephant