A surrogate mother will naturally produce breast milk. Since she is the one who is pregnant her breasts will begin to produce milk as the pregnancy proceeds. Usually what makes a surrogate pregnancy different than an adoptive pregnancy is that the surrogate mother has had a fertilized egg implanted that is not hers. If the woman who has provided the egg wishes to nurse her child, she will have to induce lactation in her own breasts prior to the birth. Many mothers who use the process of surrogacy pregnancy to have a child do this. By inducing lactation and then nursing their baby the many positive benefits of breastfeeding are given to the baby. What is especially positive is that there is a greater bonding between mother and child that occurs only with breastfeeding.
no because all mammals mothers cant produce milk like birds
Like all mammals, baby horses drink milk their mothers produce.
The action of the kittens' paws stimulates the mothers mammary glands to produce milk.
When girls become mothers they use their breasts to produce milk for their babies. The material in their breasts turns into milk.
When girls become mothers they use their breasts to produce milk for their babies. The material in their breasts turns into milk.
A cat pounds as a throwback to when it was a kitten. When they fed from their mothers the pounding helped produce milk.
Singular possessive: mother's milk Plural possessive: mothers' milk
send it to me with pictures and you email
there are teas and supplements you can take that will help you to produce milk, if you have delivered a baby and are nursing. Mothers that adopt an infant can be prescribed hormones, by their doctors that will help to produce milk to feed their babies. Call a lactation consultant in your area for further info.
No. Turtles are reptiles, not mammals, and do not feed their young on mothers' milk.
yes harper seals drink there mothers milk
Yes it is possible but not practical.