The male sea otter can have as many as fifteen females in his region at a time. When otters mate, it can be a very violent, sometimes causing the female scarring. Now imagine David Attenbergh saying that.
It really depends on the individual otter species.
Eurasian river otters (just otters for the rest of this text) for example live solitary except during mating season.
The male otter stays with the female for a few days and they get used to each other by playing just like cubs.
When they both are ready, the male grabs the female neck and holds her with his front paws. Copulation can last 20 to 90 Minutes, and they can repeat that quite often over days.
Male and female otters are polygamous, so they will also mate with more males/females if they find more than one.
Another interesting fact: If two adult male otters fight, they most times try to break each other baculum, so mating is impossible till the broken bone heals.
There are some really interesting books about otters out there! =)
Otters, like all mammals, reproduce through a male impregnating a female.
Pretty much just like any other mammal.
the way they have babies, is to mate.
Otters, like all mammals, reproduce through a male impregnating a female.
Otters produce using sexual intercourse and give live birth.
They reproduce by cell splitting but can also reproduce in other ways too.
budding,reproduce,fission
All mammals reproduce by sex. The age at which otters are mature and able to reproduce varies by species, but generally falls into two or three years old.
Two ways are sexual and asexual.
They usually have about 5 or less babies. but they do not reproduce like dogs... (which has about 11 or 12 puppies
sexualy reproduce parthenogenesis ex
With seeds
they do
budding
Plants reproduce from stem in many ways, like grafting, budding,marcotting.