answersLogoWhite

0

How hamster behave?

Updated: 8/11/2023
User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

Best Answer

I have several russian dwarf hamsters. My female hamster gave birth last month to a litter of four of which 3 have survived and are now sexually mature themselves. All are housed in separate cages. What I am sharing is based purely on observation of the interaction between my male hamster, Oscar, and female hamster, Minibus: Apart from covering uneaten food in the dish with nesting material every time they finish snacking, both seemed unperturbed by their untidy cage with nesting material (I use roughly shredded toilet paper) all over on their bedding. Then, one early morning I noticed Oscar packing his cheek pouches with the tissue only to deposit it elsewhere in the cage. He had retrieved every bit of tissue from the cage till the area looked as if Housekeeping had come in and made up the room, save the large, well-woven nest at one corner! (Did you know that the nest is woven in such a way that it has "trip wires" to alert its inhabitants of intruders?) Minibus, who did not lift a finger to help in the building of the nest, merely checked it out from time to time. Then, Oscar began wooing her with gifts. The chew stick I dropped into the cage, he placed at Minibus' feet, but she took no notice of it. Bits of food, he would offer her, but she'd reject them. Oscar would stand on his hind legs and stick out his paws like a playful puppy wanting her attention, but she would either squeak at him or pin him down. He would freeze in that position till she backed off. Sometimes, Oscar would sniff Minibus' butt or underbelly but this would get an irritated hiss from her. Other times, he would nuzzle her, they would lick each other's mouths and snouts. Then out of the blue, the cage got really smelly - thanks to Minibus' odorous scent. This whipped Oscar into a frenzy and he began to sniff Minibus' hindquarters to the point of lifting up her backside and chasing her round the cage. The difference between this latest antic and the previous ones is that there were no audible squeaks, hisses or signs of protest from her. :)

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

Campbells hamsters are a little more picky when it comes to mating than Syrian hamsters. Campbells' have a propensity to mate for life. This is mostly due to the fact that as they get older it becomes more difficult for them to bond with outside hamsters.

Though there are exceptions, pairing up hamsters over a month old is hit and miss. The draw back being that a miss may injure a hamster.

So for starting a new colony or introducing a new pair, I always start young, if I can help it, a month old. You'll have a much better success ratio if you adopt this approach.

If for some reason you should have to introduce older animals together, you'll need to get a clean cage and clean toys with clean bedding.. Let the male mark the territory a bit, 10 or 15 minutes tops; then introduce the female. This way the two are more or less on neutral ground. This simulates the male finding a female in his outer territory. He'll be interested and she won't have any nest to defend yet. Watch carefully for the next day or two. There will be a power struggle but they shouldn't hurt each other. The minute you see any serious biting, separate them. Sometimes you'll miss the fighting completely and one or other will get a grievous wound. This unfortunately is the chance you take putting older hamsters together. If the hamsters never settle down and sleep together, this is a sign that the haven't bonded and may not ever bond.

Be warned, even if an old pairing works out and the animals get along, they may not have any ltters together. That choice is still totally up to them.

Mating

There are few mating rituals in Campbells hamster courtships.. One of those is that the male runs around the female closely in circles. He may sniff at her and groom her quickly as he goes. After determining that the scent is right and that she isn't hostile, he grabs her from behind with both arms and massages her neck with his nose.. I'm not sure what this does except maybe it persuades her to hold still for a few seconds more to allow him to finish.

The whole procedure repeats several times until the female runs away or chases the male away.. but it may go on like this for 30 minutes.

Females tend to be in heat every four days. Some of my hamsters are regular like clockwork, others go five days or more sometimes.

Grooming

Grooming each other is an ongoing part of a dwarf hamsters relationships. From the time they are very little, dwarf hamsters learn the order of dominance by who grooms who. A hamster who grooms another hamster shows that he or she is dominant in that relationship. Many times a Wrestling match will finish off with the victor of the match doing nothing more than grooming the loser.. At times losers object to this and struggle to get away from the attentions of the dominant hamster.. Now grooming does more than just prove dominance to the loser; the act of grooming itself actually applies one of those 6 chemical scents I mentioned in the "about campbells" section that a hamster uses to mark his territory.

A pup in a colony gets groomed by every adult in the colony.. By this means they all recognize the pup as theirs. This can be trying to a runt of a litter who continues to be groomed and actually looses hair from over grooming. As the pup grows he'll be better able to avoid those attentions.. so the hair will grow back.

Nursing

These are Cubit's first pups born July 1, 2000 There are five of them. At 2 days old they are still too young to see the color and marking.

Same pups at 5 days.

This subject I want to hit from two angles, what to do if you have to nurse an abandoned or orphaned litter and what to expect from your nursing females. I'll start with the normal situation:

Females give birth in two very different ways depending on the female. The best and the easiest, at least to watch, is the type that builds a nice nest and bares the litter in the nest. The other way is to have the pups where ever she is at the time.. and maybe in more than one place spread out. Experience has taught me that both types work if you let them alone. What will happen with the second type is she will collect the babies one at a time and take them to her nest. Do not get excited and intervene here! Trying to help out is only going to make her uncomfortable and may lead to loss of the litter. Restrain yourself and resign yourself to only touch the food bowl and the water bottles in the cage if at all possible.

Remember that Campbell's are in heat immediately following delivery. Some people get upset by this because it causes mating behavior in her mate. It is the reason most often given by breeders for removing the male from the cage. I find that unless you are wanting to stop the pair from ever having more offspring, it's best to allow him to stay in the cage.

Hamsters in the wild would mate immediately following birth the same way these hamsters do in captivity. I have watched a female kick the male out of the nest and then minutes later go seek him out for some heavy mating. It's normal and shouldn't hurt the pups.

I've heard people get all excited and claim that the male hamster was trying to eat the babies. I find the truth to be quite the opposite. If the litter should be destroyed, it's usually the mother who does it. The father will lick and clean the babies and hold each pup as he does this; And of course, if the pup needs to be moved he'll move it with his mouth. This is normal; it's the same thing the mother does. I've also heard others credit leaving the father in the cage after pups are born for reduced litter size. With Campbell's at least I have found the opposite to be true. In fact, I just had a colony support a litter of 14; all survive to this day. Your job is clean water and fresh food Leave the babies to them.

Cubit nursing.

There is however a time where you may have to intercede.. this is in the event that the mother dies or abandons her young. Nursing a litter of pups is down right hard to do for a human. It requires attention around the clock and most of the time just isn't possible. If the pups are anywhere from a few days old to 8 days old they may not make it unless you have a surrogate hamster mother readily available. Knowing exactly how warm to keep the babies at all times, how to touch them, and feed them, at that age you'd need you be a hamster mother with hamster mother instincts. If the hamsters are 8 days or older you may be able to pull it off. At this age there little bodies can better regulate their own body temperature; also, they've become more adept at eating small seeds and grains.

This is what I feed my orphaned hamsters when I'm faced with this prospect:

evaporated milk 50/50 mixed with warm water. I warm the water to 90 degree Fahrenheit first.

Farina wheat cereal (Creamy Wheat) which I sprinkle near the pups.

Broccoli. Do not over feed

Cauliflower Do not over feed

The pups have the ability to eat solid food at this point but this can not be their whole diet. It takes awhile for them to build up the caecal bacteria in their stomachs that help them break down the hard food. Milk is still their primary nourishment. You may alternatively use goats milk or lactol or any other cat or dog milk substitute formula.

Pups should be feed 3 drops every half hour until their eyes open; from that point .5 ml to 1 ml every hour should do until they are about 3 weeks old.

Vital statistics for an adult dwarf hamster are as follows:

body temp 95 degree, pulse rate 340-450 beats per minute, respiration 250 breaths per minute, life span 2 years, size 53-102 mm in length,[About Us] [About Campbell's] [LATEST NEWS]

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

Usaully bigger hamsters behave the greatest

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How hamster behave?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Why is my hamster eating her paws?

A hamster will not usually behave in this manner. It could be a sign that she is very sick, or that she has some sort of mite infestation. You really must take her to see a vet.


Please urgent my hamster just got bitten by my cat but shes not bleeding how do i treat it?

let her rest but if she behave differently pls bring her to the vet immediately. by estherbella


What are all the specis of hamsters?

There is lots like, Syrian, Chinese dwarf hamster, Campbells dwarf hamster, Robo dwarf hamster, Russian hamster. My favorite, is the blueberry campbells dwarf hamster and the Syrian hamster. They are the sweetest and easy to hold. NOT THE ROBO"S!!!


Are guinea pigs bigger than Hamsters?

a guinea pig is absolutely bigger than a hamster hamsters are nearly the same size as mice only just bigger. a guinea pig just overtakes the rabbit and it is quite large for a small pet animal. they behave a lot differently to hamsters as well and behave more like rabbits. yesGuinea pigs are bigger. A hamster is maybe the size of one baseball while a guinea pig will be like 3-4 baseballs long.


How do you say hamster in German?

Hamster(der) Hamster


What is a hamster pulse?

A hamster pulse is the pulse of a hamster.


What kinda hamster do you have?

i don't have a hamster but when i get 1 it will be a Syrian hamster.


Is a pee wee hamster English?

no a hamster in english is hamster...


What are the species of hamsters?

There is lots like, Syrian, Chinese dwarf hamster, Campbells dwarf hamster, Robo dwarf hamster, Russian hamster. My favorite, is the blueberry campbells dwarf hamster and the Syrian hamster. They are the sweetest and easy to hold. NOT THE ROBO"S!!!


Two most popular hamsters?

The most popular hamster is the Dwarf Hamster, in second place is the teddy bear hamster and in third, the black bear hamster!


Your hamster is gold and white with short hair What kind of hamster is it?

that will proberly be a Syrian Hamster or the Golden Hamster.


How can you tell a hamster is a hamster?

Chances are, if it looks like your stereotypical hamster, it is a hamster. If it doesn't, it's a rabbit.