Only if the males have been castrated.
male and female what?
First you select a male for your female; or female for your male. Put them in a room together, but if the female is aggressive or the male is it's best not to. When they want, they will breed and keep repeating until the female is pregnant.
Breeding gunipigs is simple all you have to do is put male with female and leave for 2 weeks then take male out cage and the female with be pregnant.
No, unless a) the female fish got pregnant before the male died, or b) you buy a new male guppy and put him in with the female.
I am not sure if you have worded your question correctly but I will try to answer anyway. Becarful of putting rabbits together that have not been raised together. The female put with a male rabbit will most likely get pregnant yes, however, have a hutch that can separate the male and female once the babies are born or the male will eat the male bunnies. If there is more than one female in the hutch when you put in the male the females may try and kill the male so it is best to pick one female and put with male separately from the other females. Hope that was helpful.
Rabbits are territorial and when you put a male in a female's cage, it is her space. Therefore it's better to put the doe in the buck's cage.
yes, the hamster could be pregnant.
No they don't get pregnant. A female produces eggs, then during mating a male will squeeze those eggs out of the female and fertilise them. The eggs are then put in a bubble nest by the male who cares for them until they hatch.
Yes, but be aware that they will breed again and the female will become pregnant.
It all depends,Is the male neutered?if he is then there is no problem if properly introduced, females are different the usually get along. If again properly introduced.ANSWER:*yes, if the male is neutered (female become pregnant as soon as male mounts her, even if you pull the male away fast there still is a 87% chance she is pregnant)*no, don't put a not neutered male in with female, unless planing to breed. (at 5-7 months)*Yes, another female would be great for company (introduce them for about a week then put them in same cage, or they may fight)
actually i left my male in with the female but first off you got to let them get to know one another other wise if you separate them while shes pregnant and then try to put the male back in she could get upset and eat them all when she has them... min had 16 babies and the male mopuse helped her with them another thing is she could get pregnant right after she has the babies so be carefull
The female betta doesn't get pregnant, she only fills up with eggs, not offspring. The female should be presented to the male in a clear chimney or breeding net in the male's tank until she shows breeding lines and the male shows interest and builds a bubble nest. The female should then be put in with the male and monitored until they show a wrapping behaviour. After this behaviour is complete, the female should be put back into her normal tank. The male will look after the now-fertilised eggs in his bubble nest until they grow big enough to be removed.