spaniel named after its region of origin
The genus of wild and domesticated cattle is: Bos.
Bob
There is no such thing as a "female cow" nor a "male cow." "Cow" refers to the female of any species including the domestic bovine, and is not a name of a specific animal. The male of a domestic bovine is called a bull, and the female (mature) a cow. To answer your question, it is the bull that is the larger of the two in most cases, such as within breeds and when the bull and the cow are the same age. But, if you compare between breeds, such as if the bull is a Dexter and the cow a Holstein, or if the bull is much younger than the cow, then the opposite may be true.
Jersey, Guernsey, Holstien, Brown Swiss and Ayshire, plus the Milking Shorthorn.
The genes.
It means : PIG! COW!
If you are talking about the cow breed, the Brangus gets it's name from it's two ancestor breeds. The Brangus is the result of a cross-breed between the Brahman and Angus cow, so it is logical to just mix the names of the two.
a cow.
It is probably Gelbvieh, a breed of cattle from Germany. The name means yellow cow. 45,000 are in the U.S.
The only breeds of cattle with buffalo DNA is the Beefalo, this is breeding a buffalo bull with a beef cow.
Bos Taurus if it's of the European breeds, or Bos indicus if it is related to the Zebu-type breeds.
There are several breeds that are raised primarily for beef.