"Sterile" men have sperm with low motility rates (meaning there either isn't as many sperm as normal, or the sperm that is there is not as active as normal). This makes it much harder than normal for that male to fertilize an egg. How likely it is that he MIGHT still fertilize largely depends on what is causing the 'sterility'.
They cannot breed, they are sterile.
As long as there is one male mouse and one female mouse in the same cage there will most likely be babies.
Having Babies - 1978 Sterile Wife 1-3 was released on: USA: 28 March 1978
Another word for an impotent male would be sterile.
No but they will make his bread rise
A male mule is always sterile, however , rarely, a female mule will be able to reproduce.
male carries the babies because they are stronger and can pretect the babies
Yes you have to separate the male gerbil from the female with her babies because if you leave the male with the female and her babies the male will kill them.
If the hamster is over 5 weeks old then yes it is very likely.
The male guppy will probably only eat the babies within a few hours of being born. Other than that, the fry are most likely safe. Even so, you should put him in a separate tank. My friends male guppy is chasing her female because he can see the babies. Good luck!
The genetic method involve the release of sterile male mosquitoes into the environmet. When the sterile male mosquito mates with a normal female mosquito, the latter does not lay any eggs. If enough sterile male mosquitoes are released into the environment, the mosquito population will eventually die out.
no they dont die at birth. They may have shorter lives than regular cats. The reason of male calicos appearing is because there was something wrong in the sex cell of the parent. Most likely an extra chromosome or a mutated one