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Turano-Mongolian cattle are morphologically distinct from the European taurine cattle especially in the shape of their skull and their horns. [2] [3] The skull is wedge-shaped and has a narrow crown and a depression on the frontal bone. The horns grow upwards instead of forwards. [3] Genetically the difference can be seen in the mtDNA ...
Yakutian cattle are the last remaining native Turano-Mongolian cattle breed in Siberia, [4] and one of only a few pure Turano-Mongolian breeds remaining worldwide. [7] Of the five mtDNA haplogroups (T, T1, T2, T3, T4) found in existing taurine cattle breeds, T2, T3 and T4 appear in Yakutian cattle, as in the Turano-Mongolian group in general ...
Thus one may refer to "three cattle" or "some cattle", but not "one cattle". "One head of cattle" is a valid though periphrastic way to refer to one animal of indeterminate or unknown age and sex; otherwise no universally used single-word singular form of cattle exists in modern English, other than the sex- and age-specific terms such as cow ...
An extreme weather phenomenon known as the dzud has killed more than 7.1 million animals in Mongolia this year, more than a tenth of the country’s entire livestock holdings, endangering herders ...
That money helped its head count rebound to over 100,000 agents and other staff in 2024, up from a multi-decade low of about 73,000 in 2017, and began a process of upgrading its IT and customer ...
A Louisiana woman allegedly caught using credit cards belonging to Telemundo journalist Adan Manzano after he was found dead has a lengthy rap sheet of arrests — and police allege she has a ...
Mongolian cattle is a Mongolian indigenous cattle breed. The majority are found in Inner Mongolia. However, some exist in the northeast, north, and northwest. Coat colors range from brindle or reddish brown but occasionally can be seen in black, yellow, or pied. The cattle have two types: Ujumqin and Halhïn Gol. [1]
Yakutian cattle are the last remaining native Turano-Mongolian cattle breed in Siberia, [45] and one of only a few pure Turano-Mongolian breeds remaining worldwide. [46] Studies of DNA markers on autosomes show a high genetic distinctiveness and point to a long-term genetic isolation from other breeds; geographic isolation beyond the normal ...