yes.... thats why hey are called "guppies...."
Poecilia reticulata
No. They would only mate with their own species.No. They would only mate with their own species.No. They would only mate with their own species.No. They would only mate with their own species.No. They would only mate with their own species.No. They would only mate with their own species.No. They would only mate with their own species.No. They would only mate with their own species.No. They would only mate with their own species.No. They would only mate with their own species.No. They would only mate with their own species.
All animals mate with their own kind (species). It is the rare species that can mate with others in its genus, such as the horse and donkey (mule) and lion and tiger (liger).
To my knowledge, live bearers! Have fun! ;)
Bettas will eat baby guppys as will most other fish, but in general, male Bettas will only fight with other male Bettas. They do not fight with other species of fish
A biological species I would think.
Animals generally only mate with their own species due to ingrained behavior and the genetics of attraction. There are examples of inter species mating with similar species, especially if the population of one species is so depressed that the ability to find a mate of the same species is remote. This behavior occurs because the drive to reproduce is very high.
Very few animals will voluntarily breed outside their own species, cheetahs included.
A group of organisms that can mate and produce offspring which can themselves mate is called a species.
my teacher said it is "species" not genus.
Badgers mate with other badgers. This is the normal way that sexual reproduction works in any species. Members of a given species mate with other members of the same species. Mating with other species will get them nowhere.
sexually