If a mouse has just given birth in a colony, she WILL nurse other litters. I see it all the time in my colony. Sometimes it's hard to tell who the mom is of what litter because they all help take care of each other's litters. So yes, mother mice will and do take care of other litters other than their own.
I have also taken orphaned mice and put them with mother mice and had her raise them as her own. Most of the time they will not kill them but sometimes you do get that crazy stressed out mouse that will kill even her own biological litter.
your mice might move her rats if she feels danger or if she is concerned something or someone might try to kill or even hurt her babies. I would also take away the male mouse because he will kill then eat the babies if there week or not strong for him.
The female mouse is the one who takes care of the young, the male will not stay with her. She cared for them until they are three weeks old when they are weaned and ready to care for themselves.
The Father mouse will eat them even uf their not dead but i think if their dead the might eat them
Being that mice are mammals, the mother feeds its young with the milk it produces.
milk from their breasts
Male mice will not care for the baby mice but they will eat the babies.
basically no
Midwives, doctors and the parents of the baby.
A mother is someone who takes care of a baby
the nurturer takes care of the new born babies before they are given to their families at the ceremony of ones.
The same way a mother cat does. By making a nest, cleaning, nursing & keeping the babies warm.
the mother and father
A dolphin takes care of its babies, by feeding it with milk.
No, mice and rats are two different species. Rats have rat babies, mice have mouse babies.
A nurse who takes care of newborns is a neonatal nurse, or, a Baby Nurse.
The mother of a baby spider monkey takes care of it.
The nurse that takes care of the babies after birth is called a postpartnum nurse.