If that is the mouse's first litter, it will be 5-10 young, if not, it could be anywhere from 8-20
they could have anything because different species of mice have a certain amount and also a rat could have some kind of birth defect in the rat.
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It varies hugely from a week or two for mice and shrews up to a year for many large mammals.
Mice certainly have had adaptations over time. The fact that mice breed so often and produce so many young is one example of an adaptation.
6 or 10 a year.
372?
Yes, they can. Mother mice will sometimes eat their young if they think their young don't have much chance a survival (if the young are sick), if they a disturbed and think they are at risk or just because it's the mother's first litter and she gets carried away. Also, if a mouse dies, another mouse may eat it for the sake of cleanliness. Mice don't tend to kill other mice to eat them.
Small mammals like mice and shrews can give birth many times in a year.
No!Mice only eat seeds etc. and small insects.
I don't think M and S sell mice pies (not intentionally)!
No. Mice are placental mammals, meaning they give birth to live young. The only egg-laying mammals (monotremes) are platypuses and echidnas.
mice breed all year round therefore they r born all year round
Usually one a year.
No, mice are mammals. They give birth to live young.