Baby elephants nurse for up to two years of age.
There are no rules about when to stop breastfeeding. A baby needs breast milk for at least the first year of life; as long as a baby eats age-appropriate solid food, the mother may nurse for several years.
Yes, they do, badger's are mammals and they nurse baby badgers
Yes. Her name was Susan. The Nurse was a wet nurse who fed the baby Juliet with the milk from her own breasts, which she had because she had recently given birth to Susan. Women do not get milk in their breasts unless they have had a baby.
* Unless you've just recently had a baby and are producing milk then you can't be a wet nurse. A wet nurse is someone that has had a baby, is producing milk and can feed someone else's baby as well. * It is possible to nurse a child with out giving birth. Research induced lactation! http://www.mamadearest.ca/en/info/newman/induced-lactation.htm
No; lizards are reptiles and don't produce milk.
Not long; the body will stop producing milk (lactating) if the breasts are not being used to nurse or pump milk.
Foals generally nurse from their mother's udder to consume milk. An orphaned foal can be bottle fed milk replacer.
Calf milk poweder is for baby cows that, for some reason, can not nurse from there mother. Calf milk powder is the same to a cow as formula is to an infant.
Yes, they nurse milk from the mother until about 4 months old.
Calf milk poweder is for baby cows that, for some reason, can not nurse from there mother. Calf milk powder is the same to a cow as formula is to an infant.
There are actually 3 types Colostrum Foremilk and Hindmilk. Colostrum is the milk a baby recieves in the first 3-7 days after birth, and is rich in antibodies. Foremilk is high in vitamins and antibodies and is a thin milk, while hind milk, the milk a baby recieves at the end of a feed is fuller, and contains body building components to encourage growth