No. Technically a butcher cow is an old cull cow (mature female bovine that's been sold off a producer's main herd due to undesirable faults that make her not worth keeping), and as such doesn't need to be castrated. Butcher bulls don't need to be castrated prior to slaughter, since it'll be more stress on the animal to castrate (thus affecting the meat) than to not castrate.
No you don't need to
A castrated elephant is called a musth.
A castrated cow is a male cow that has been surgically or chemically altered to remove its testicles, effectively making it unable to reproduce. Castrating cows is a common practice in agriculture to manage breeding and behavior in livestock.
Cows are not castrated. Bulls are. Bull calves are best castrated before 6 months of age.
If intact, a bull. If castrated, a steer or bullock.
No you don't need to
A castrated elephant is called a musth.
A castrated cow is a male cow that has been surgically or chemically altered to remove its testicles, effectively making it unable to reproduce. Castrating cows is a common practice in agriculture to manage breeding and behavior in livestock.
Cows are not castrated. Bulls are. Bull calves are best castrated before 6 months of age.
A beef cow or a beef steer (castrated male bovine).
A cow. Male = bull Female = cow Castrated male = steer
If intact, a bull. If castrated, a steer or bullock.
The offspring of a cow is referred to as a calf. A heifer calf is a female calf, a bull calf is an intact male calf, and a steer calf is a castrated male calf (castrated after birth).
Yes it is.
Yes, half the brisket (forward-most section of the chest) would be included in a half cow carcass from a butcher.
A steer. Steers are castrated bulls, not cows. Cows do not have testes either, and, there is no such thing as a "male cow".
"Male cows" castrated before reaching sexual maturity are called steers.