Yes, female snow leopards care for the cubs until they are old enough to care for themselves.
very.
Big cat males do not take care of offspring. Leopards aren't an exception. Even male lions don't take care of the Cubs, although they would fight to protect their Cubs.
she pees on them
they teach their young how to climb and hunt for food. so when they are older they can do it then.
The mating season for snow leopards is late winter and early spring, normally January to mid-March. Females have to be 2 or 3 years old, and males have to 4, before either can mate. When snow leopards find a mate, they stay together during a short period of time. They mate 12-36 times a day, in the usual felid posture, during which one snow leopard climbs on the other's back. Once the female is pregnant, the male leaves; he doesn't help raise the cubs. Female snow leopards can mate every other year, although they don't always. It is not known how often male snow leopards mate.
leopards attack the cubs, but human are the most threat to giant pandas because of loss of habitat.
no , puma's actually take care of their cubs and when the cubs are ready they leave their family
Zoo keeper, take care of panda cubs.
The males take care of the cubs while the lionness goes hunting
Just the mother.
clean them teach them how to hunt nurse them basicly the same thing your mom does
The ancestors of snow leopards took advantage of what is called an "open niche". The mountainous regions of Central Asia 1,200 - 6000 meters (3,900 to 20,000 feet) above sea level were not inhabited by other large predators, although wild sheep, goats, and deer were available for prey. At lower elevations, the ancestors of leopards and tigers, and those species once they evolved, were better hunters and territory holders. It was safer for the early snow leopards to live in the mountains. Gradually, those animals with better adaptations to the cold (small ears, short faces, furry feet, thick fur, etc.), and to the unstable rocky terrain (for example, very long tails that can be used for balance), were the ones that had more cubs that survived and had cubs of their own. Those cubs could move further up the mountains, too, and could take advantage of the higher elevation prey. Over thousands of years, the snow leopards became so specialized that they can no longer survive in warmer regions.