An Angus bull typically has 60 chromosomes – 30 from the cow and 30 from the bull. Each parental contribution includes 29 autosomes and one sex chromosome (X or Y).
46 chromosomes
23 chromosomes
They have 19 Chromosomes
Dandelions have 16 chromosomes.
it has two sets of chromosomes
Angus is a male bull, and is one of your many neighbors that you can have in your town.
they have 13
none
Angus bulls don't have horns. The Angus breed itself is naturally polled. A bull that is born from a registered Angus cow and registered Angus bull and comes up horned or scurred is not qualified to be a registered purebred animal, no matter what Angus association it is. And no bovine's horns are hollow. You can see that from the horns that are tipped on rodeo bulls or some range cows.
Semen that is ejaculated into cows to produce Angus-sired calves.
Generally a packer bull is a bull that is a low-grade beef bull intended for slaughter. It is synonymous with bologna bulls, slaughter bulls or cull bulls. A Packer bull is also simply part of the name of a registered purebred bull, such as Messmer Packer S008 which is a Red Angus bull from Messmer Red Angus out of North Dakota, or Conneally Packer 547, an Angus bull from the Wheeler Mountain Ranch.
Just like a black angus, only red.
Well this is a very ambiguous question. An Angus bull can be any age, from 0 at birth to 15 years old or older.
If a regular diploid body cell, (liver, skin etc..) have 60 chromosomes then the gamete (reproductive cell ie sperm/egg) have half that numberof chromosomes- So the Bull's liver cell contains 60 chromosomes.
A red angus what? Cow? Bull? Heifer? Please be more specific in your questions!
Up to 2200 lbs.
Regardless of gender, cattle have 60 chromosomes.