straight away, but you CAN NOT touch the babies until they are at least 2 week of age, and if you touch them at that age make sure you rub your hands in the fur in side the nest before you pick them up. you will only need to do that for 1 week after that you don't need to rub your hands in the fur. hope i was a help:)
The male should be removed from the doe's cage at all times except for breeding purposes. The father will most likely mate with his daughters and the mother and will kill the kits if they are young. Do not put the male in with a mother!
Kits can be taken from their mothers 5-6 weeks after birth if they are weaned properly.
A female rabbit CAN REBREED the day she has her litter. (Not a very good idea, but possible.)
The second after the last kit is born.
immediately
An average Australian Shepard will carry her litter for about 6 months, but it all depends on how many babies there are. TYhe more babies, the longer she'll have them.
They have 5 to 6 pups per litter. as long as they have IT for.
Rabbits should not be breed until they are at least one year of age at the very minimum. Young rabbits do not make good mothers and there is a high mortality rate for both mothers and babies.
Does (female rabbits) can get pregnant the very day they give birth, and gestation lasts about 30 days; so, theoretically, a doe can get pregnant once a month (twelve times a year). Practically speaking, though, no rabbit could sustain this kind of activity for long, as pregnancy and nursing takes a lot of energy.
Since a rabbit's gestation period is only ~30 days long, a rabbit certainly can give birth more than twice a year.
A rabbit carries its babies for 28 to 35 days.
Rabbits do not have a typical estrus cycle as other mammals. Rabbits are stimulated to ovulate by the mating act, and as such, can be ready to mate and conceive again as soon as they drop each litter -- approximately every 30 days.
An average Australian Shepard will carry her litter for about 6 months, but it all depends on how many babies there are. TYhe more babies, the longer she'll have them.
They have 5 to 6 pups per litter. as long as they have IT for.
No, it'll be possible for the female rabbit to become pregnant again 12 hours after giving birth to her litter. Unless you want even more rabbits a month later... bad idea.
6 - 8 weeks. They start eating and learn to use the litter by then.
Panda cubs stay with their mother for about a year, when the next litter comes along.
Baby rabbits are born 32 days after the mating between the doe and the buck
Not as long as they are now but they will never be tiny again
A healthy hamster can be breed at about 4 months old and the average litter can have between 4 - 20 babies at a time. Normally it takes between 15 - 24 days for a hamster to have the babies.
You should wait 3-4 months until breeding again. If the female breeds too often (litter after litter) it will shorten her life span.
Rabbits should not be breed until they are at least one year of age at the very minimum. Young rabbits do not make good mothers and there is a high mortality rate for both mothers and babies.