Good question. Wait until the puppy is 6 months old and ask the vet.
In most cases, a veterinarian is trained to wait until the puppy is four months (16 weeks) old to schedule a spay/neuter surgery. However, new research and techniques show you can spay a puppy as young as 8 weeks with very low complication rates provided the puppy is at least 5 pounds in weight at the time of surgery.
No, wait 6 months.
I have never heard of a dog getting cancer if you do not spay them. I raised pure bred collies and did not spay the females as we wanted to breed them. None of my females ever got cancer
wait until after their kittens are weaned for a while then spay.
That question should be asked of the vet, not us at Wiki. Four months old is too young to neuter, anyway. There are studies that indicate early spay/neuter is not a good thing to do for your pet. You should wait until they are a minimum of 6 months old.
It is best to wait until your dog is at least 5 months old before giving them a bath.
The risk is lowest when the puppy is spayed before she is six months old, but this can be done before she is two years old. It is also effective to spay a dog before she is eight years old. Edit: Above was spot-on traditional. Especially for working dogs, it has been replaced by spay (or neuter) them later rather than early. For females, after the first heat or litter; males at about a year and a half (before 9 months and your going to get an underdeveloped dog). Early erodes development hormones requisite for achieving their potential.
A puppy can be 1 year and 6 months old to have puppies (female), and to leave another dog pregnant 9 months (male). You might wait longer, if you are not interested in breeding them as young as possible. A female can have puppies until she is 8 years old and a male until he dies.
Just like a human, you must wait until the puppy matures into an adult dog.
Never breed a puppy,if it is a girl wait until the 2nd or even the 3rd heat if it`s a boy wait until he`s a least 1 year old.
No, 8 weeks is too young to spay a rabbit because she isn't sexually mature yet. Female rabbits can be spayed as young as 4 months, but surgery is risky on such a young rabbit so most vets prefer to wait until about 6 months before spaying a rabbit. Male rabbits can be neutered once their testicles descend, usually around 4 months. The neuter surgery is much less invasive than the spay surgery.