if you have them indoors they will be fine at a temperature you are comfortable in. outoors (in a shed) you can use a heat lamp above the cage. be carefull not to let the heat lamp touch anything flammable. and your mice need a nest to stay warm. lint, tissues, scraps of cloth, yarn... they are very adaptable! good luck!
Rodent Mouse: Keep the temperature in the room at something that's comfortable for you--say, between 60 and 75 degrees F. And provide your mouse with bedding, and something they can hide in like a small box or one of those wooden houses you can find at the pet store. Give them tissues and stuff like hamster bedding, and they'll make their own cozy little nests. Plus, if you have more than one, they'll snuggle together.
If your mouse is sick or very young or seems to be having trouble, you can try putting a water bottle in with it. Or put a heating pad under half of the cage and set it at low or medium. Leave half of the cage unheated so the mouse can get away from the heat if it wants--they can get overheated easily. Computer Mouse: The computer mouse is cold to touch during the winter months or whenever the temperatures drop. To keep your computer mouse warm, use an USB heated computer mouse. Computer mice come in a variety of shapes, sizes and with multi-functionalities. If you find your computer mouse is cold, you can keep is warm by using a mouse with heat. A warm mouse is safe for people and the computer. To learn more about the "USB heated computer mouse" search Google. There are a variety of mouse warmers and mouse warming techniques. To keep your computer mouse warm, you can use a mouse warmer blanket and a mouse warmer pad. Both items provide warmth for the computer mouse.
You can take a heir drier and put it NOT to close to the animal, but keep a small distance. Is the animal is smaller in size, you can use some cotton or another warm fabric and just cover it gently.
Well they should just have there mother for warmth and she should have made a nest for them.
If they don't have a mother and they are in a cage, just put some wood shavings in a pile, place the baby's on them and you can get a reptile light to keep them warm. If you don't know what a reptile light is, just look it up! :D
If they have a mother and you think they look cold, you can just buy some wood shavings from the pet store and place them near the mother and baby's, and she should come and collect them to make a nest.
Put plenty wood shavings there because mice can be picky. :)
Baby mice sleep a lot to keep their bodies worm. But you can wrap it in a blanket so it doesn't lose body temperature
They make burrows. But I put a spare fleece glove in my cage, it keeps them warm and they sleep in it.
Through the protection of its mother.
she is doing that to keep them warm... Dont do anything.. let the mouse do what it is doing.
Yes a mouse will often make a nest to keep warm and cosy. Especially if it's about to give birth.
Try and keep him very warm. Make sure it has plenty of water.
No, they always try to get to someplace warm
Yes. A mouse is a mammal therefore it is warm blooded.
yes.
I would never bath a baby mouse personally. If you keep it you can try it with mildly warm water when it is mature.
It is best to keep keep the little mouse somewhere warm overnight, maybe in a box with air holes and pieces of cloth in it and place that in an airing cupboard or under a lamp. Then take the mouse tot the vet as soon as possible. They will be able to either nurse the little guy back to health or if need be put it to sleep. Try putting him in a box, with old clothes or something to keep it warm, keep box in a safe warm and quiet place with a little food and water, but be prepared that the mouse may end up dying anyway due to shock. Good Luck.
Mice are mammals. All mammals are warm blooded. Therefore, the white footed mouse is warm blooded, meaning it can regulate its own body temperature.
whales keep warm by their blubber! good question
the best mouse to keep for a pet is female fancy mouse
keep you warm