Yes, they are.
Animals have evolved behaviors and instincts that drive them to mate in order to reproduce and ensure the survival of their species. Hormones, pheromones, and environmental cues all play a role in triggering mating behaviors and signaling to animals when it's time to reproduce.
Absolutely not. Even if they do not fight while observed, the natural instinct of these animals will eventually show. Separate male and female every time after they mate, and especially after the babies are born.
Yes - all animals that are born with a brain - are also born with natural instinct embedded in their brain.
All animals have the instinct to breed. If they hadn't have, the species would have died out long ago.
Most animals do. They have instinct about what to do. Also, their mothers normally help them.
Everything organic that has a brain has instinct, find food, mate, avoid predators and danger, animals have evolved their instincts. The animals that had genetic mutations that didn't have these instincts died before they could reproduce as much as the ones that did, and the ones that did passed their genes on.
Instinct theory is a theory that looks at motivation of people and animals. In instinct theory, behavior is motivated by instinct, which is ingrained in animals to help them survive.
A tigers instinct is what they are born with when they know what they are supposed to do
Instinct. Natural instinct: Example: A foal learning to stand within minutes of being born.
they get a instinct to where it is
yes
Animals mate so that their young are born when there will be food. This is also based on how long the mothers need to carry the young in the womb. Deer mate in the fall because the fawns best chance of survival is to be born in the spring when there is grass to eat.