Yes they do. Sometimes these sacs bursts while the kitten is in the birth canal, sometimes they don't.
The mother cat should make sure the kitten is safely out of the sac once it is born, if she does not you should do this, if not, the kitten will not be able to breathe!
If the sac bursts before the kitten is born, the mother should pass it soon. Sometimes female cats eat the placenta, don't be alarmed if you do not find any, this is what is likely to have happened.
The pink sack is called the placenta.
placenta
No. Just the sack.
a sac on the newborn snapping turtle to give them nutrients they need
No. The umbilical cord is attached to the placenta, which is the sack that the baby grows in. After giving birth, the placenta and the umbilical cord leave the body through the vagina.
the phrase hit the sack came from Germany.
It is the sack that surrounds the fetus in the womb/uterus. It contains the amniotic fluid and has the umbilical cord passing through it.
Not unless there was more than one baby. It is common to see both yolk sack and baby until the placenta forms but if there are not 2 separate heart beats then there is probably only one baby.
a ball sack is the answer dick face
She should do it naturally. If she doesn't then rip sack yourself, with clean and sterile hands, and she should start taking care of it after you rip it open, bring the newborn pup to her face and her maternal instincts should kick in. Good luck to you! :-)
from when the barbarians sacked rome ultimately destroying it
The probable derivation of this phrase is an allusion to tradesmen, who owned their own tools and took them with them in a bag or sack when they were dismissed from employment.