No, though most people believe that. The male has a forked penis and the female has two vaginae. They only mate once a year but the female has two litters during one year. One of the pregnancies is delayed.
It's an old, old wives tale, and is certainly not true.
No, male frogs can only mate with females.
The male dose not have a mate
No. Koalas do not mate for life. A dominant male will mate with as many females as he can.
of course
No, to mate there needs to be a female and male involved
They mate in mid october to early november.
about 2 or 3
They will do both. Both. They will first mate, and then the female will kill the male.
Platypuses breed just once a year. Males will mate with several females during that time, but females will generally only mate with one male.
Male koalas can be kept together as long as they are not within a colony of females. If they do not have any females or territory to fight over, they can live peacably together. Native wildlife sanctuaries often keep several males separate from the females quite successfully.
Lions dont have to court one another. When females lions come to heat, the male lions that head the pride get the privilege to mate with them. Only the male leader of the pride can mate with the females of the pride and nobody else. By virtue of being the pride leader, the male lion gets the opportunity to mate with all the females in the group
Male moles are the ones that find the females to mate. Male moles are the moles who find the females to mate with. Moles have a very good sense of smell, so the males track down the sense of the female, follow it, check the female aout and if the male is lucky enough, the female will mate with it.