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  2. Bovine vaginal prolapse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bovine_vaginal_prolapse

    Bovine prolapsed vagina can occur when the cow is near calving, in the late phases of cow's pregnancy (usually last trimester). [1] Sometimes cow's cervix prolapses along its vagina, [5] and such condition is known as the bovine cervico-vaginal prolapse. [3] [6] It can happen that cow's urinary bladder gets contained within the prolapsed vagina ...

  3. Bovine uterine prolapse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bovine_uterine_prolapse

    Prolapsed uterus in a cow. Bovine uterine prolapse occurs when the bovine uterus protrudes after calving. It is most common in dairy cattle and can occur in beef cows occasionally with hypocalcaemia. [1] It is not as commonly seen in heifers, but occasionally can be seen in dairy heifers and most commonly Herefords. [citation needed]

  4. Milk fever - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk_fever

    Typical milk fever posture; cow in sternal recumbency with its head tucked into its flank. Milk fever, postparturient hypocalcemia, or parturient paresis is a disease, primarily in dairy cattle [1] but also seen in beef cattle and non-bovine domesticated animals, [2] characterized by reduced blood calcium levels (hypocalcemia).

  5. Dairy cattle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dairy_cattle

    Cows are at their most fertile between 60 and 80 days after calving. Cows remaining "open" (not with calf) after this period become increasingly difficult to breed, which may be due to poor health. Failure to expel the afterbirth from a previous pregnancy, luteal cysts, or metritis, an infection of the uterus, are common causes of infertility

  6. Freemartin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freemartin

    The etymology of the term "freemartin" is uncertain: speculations include that "free" may indicate "willing" (referring to the freemartin's willingness to work) or "exempt from reproduction" (referring to its sterility, or to a farmer's decision to not bother trying to breed a freemartin, or both), or that it may be derived from a Flemish word for a cow which gives no milk and/or has ceased to ...

  7. Horse’s head and pregnant cow used in ‘barbaric ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/horse-head-pregnant-cow-used...

    The discovery of a severed horse head, and a cow quartered with its bloodied dead calf on top, have rattled a Sicilian town, with authorities treating the incident as a mafia threat. The dead ...

  8. Neospora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neospora

    Cows are usually the intermediate host. No horizontal cow-to-cow transmission have been shown, although salival interactions have been suggested. Vertical transmission can occur when an infected cow gives birth to an infected calf—the calf survives the infection and grows into an adult. Vertical route is the major route of transmission in ...

  9. Bill Gates wants to 'fix the cows' so they stop burping ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/bill-gates-wants-fix-cows...

    A controlled study run by Rumin8 and University of New England found an impressive 81% reduction in methane emissions when cattle had access to water troughs treated with the tech company's ...