On bulls, bucks & rams

VertigoBE

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Hi all,

it might be a stupid question for some, but I've been wondering this one for some time now. As far as the name used for certain male antelope's, it seems that sometimes "bull" is used (ex: Sable Bull) sometimes "buck" is used (ex: fallow deer) and sometimes "ram" is used (ex: impala ram)

Is there any reason or logic to this? Why not a sable ram and an impala buck?
 
I being size matters in this case. Smaller antelopes are rams, bigger species are bulls. Antlered deer are bucks
 
As Above deer species cast antlers smilar to bone bucks and stags
Antelopes have continuous horn growth like your nails think sheep ewes and rams
the bull and cow term is used on larger animals
The terms were probably carried over from there use in domestic farm animals.
 
@wipartimer and @Dudders:

thanks for this, so the rule is:

Shed's antler's = buck (but still bull moose)
Horn's = ram for small animals, bull for large animals
 
Yes. Size matters on antlered critters too. Buck-deer, bull- elk or moose
 
Can't attest to "all" species world-wide but, the generally accepted break point African antelope species is gemsbok oryx. Smaller than gemsbok it's generally ram/ewe and gemsbok and larger bull/cow.
 
Hi all,

it might be a stupid question for some, but I've been wondering this one for some time now. As far as the name used for certain male antelope's, it seems that sometimes "bull" is used (ex: Sable Bull) sometimes "buck" is used (ex: fallow deer) and sometimes "ram" is used (ex: impala ram)

Is there any reason or logic to this? Why not a sable ram and an impala buck?
Bulls and rams are separated by weight. A female to a Bull is a cow, and a female to a ram is called a ewe. There are two exceptions in Africa that I know of, which is the Nyala and the Sitatunga, where both the males are considered bulls, yet their females are called ewes and not cows.


Can't attest to "all" species world-wide but, the generally accepted break point African antelope species is gemsbok oryx. Smaller than gemsbok it's generally ram/ewe and gemsbok and larger bull/cow.
Sorry to say, but I believe that this is incorrect. The accepted break for African animals is the Nyala, not the Gemsbuck. The male Nyala is known as a bull since he is heavy enough, yet the female is known as a ewe. I only know of the Sitatunga where the same rule applies.
 

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2RECON wrote on Riflecrank's profile.
Hallo Ron, do you remember me? I´m Michael from Germany. We did some Wildcats on the .338 Lapua Case.
.375 i did, and a .500 and .510 you did.
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