Despite the previous answer, yes, yes it does.
It's called the baculum or os-penis bone. Look it up.
Because God said so.
Yes. All breeds of dog have a small bone in their penis, called the OS penis, that aids them in mating.
The baculum (also penis bone, penile bone or os penis) is a bone found in the penis of many placental mammals, not just in raccoons and bears. Domestic dogs and cats, and many other mammals have the bone.
A splanchnic bone is a bone that develops in soft tissue and is unattached to the rest of the skeleton. Ex. In cats and dogs: Os penis (a bone in the penis) In cattle: Os cordis (a bone in the heart)
A splanchnic bone is a bone that develops in soft tissue and is unattached to the rest of the skeleton. Ex. In cats and dogs: Os penis (a bone in the penis) In cattle: Os cordis (a bone in the heart)
Many species of animals specifically mammals have a bone in their penis. Larger mammals such as horses, bulls, camels, etc as well as some smaller ones - Dogs, cats, etc. If we talk about mammals, only a few of them do not have a bone in their penis.
The baculum (also called the penis bone, penile bone or os penis) is a bone found in the penis of many placental mammals including raccoons.
Male raccoon have a bone in their penis. The baculum (also called the penis bone, penile bone or os penis) is a bone found in the penis of many placental mammals.
As in many mammals, the male raccoon has a baculum. The baculum (also penis bone, penile bone or os penis) is a bone found in the penis of many placental mammals.
Knotting a dogs penis is not taken literally it is not tying a penis in a knot it is when the dogs penis gets stuck in the dogs vagina and he begins ejaculating
you can't break your penis as it is not a bone it is just a muscle so you cant break it.
Most mammals have a bone, called a baculum, in their penis. Dogs, cats, rodents, marine mammals, primates, etc. Humans do not have a baculum. This makes it necessary for the penis to become engorged with blood in order to copulate.
Splanchnic bone