Unlikely, because male rabbits are not good fathers. Once, our male rabbit nipped his offspring's ear. This does not mean you can call him "a mean animal who practices child abuse," because he is not programmed to help the young. I loved him until he died...
They should be separate BEFORE they mate. You should never house 2 rabbits together. Rabbits are very territorial and require their own space. You take the doe to the bucks cage and then remove her after breeding takes place, returning her to her own cage.
I have a neutered male ( Benny) and a female (Millie) living together and when they are out in a run next to another rabbit the female (Millie) normally tries to mate with Benny this could be a dominance thing with other rabbits being around, or even if other rabbits are not around she might just be a very dominant doe.
This won't effect them unless the family mated together a lot previously (ex. 2 siblings have babies 2 of them have babies then 2 of them have babies) I just advise to watch them so this can't happen again to them or the babies. Otherwise congrats on your baby bunnies!
Apollo had no wife though he had some children and mated with many women.
Most often times, yes. If two rabbits have mated, they probably have become a pair and will stick together for life. If the rabbit is a stud, meaning he is of good bloodline and has the occupation of simply making babies, then he will most likely not form a bond with one particular mate. If you have two rabbits that you want to stay together, just leave them alone (still provide a little supervision in case they fight) and see what happens! :)
no. because the they will fight each other
No
That is a very big sign that you doe (female ) is pregnant she Will probably have her babies in the next week
no the stuffed animal has no sperm or .......... so it cant. pretty funny though
Whatever physical attributes are most useful in the current environment. For instance if there was a group of rabbits, the fastest would avoid predators best, if it then mated with another fast rabbit the baby rabbits would all grow up to be faster.
Tamed is an anagram for mated.
Only if they have mated with a rooster. Even if a rooster in in a flock though, her eggs may not be fertilized, as he may not have mated with her. In that case, if you really want the hen to lay fertilized eggs, you could consider penning the rooster and hen up together for a few days.Actually, you can eat the fertilized eggs. It really makes no difference.The answer to your question is that yes, hens lay fertilized eggs, but only if she has mated with a rooster. If she hasn't, the egg isn't fertilized.