A mother chinchilla begins caring for her kits as soon as they are born. She cleans them during the birthing process and even uses her teeth to help pull them from the birth canal. She dries them after the birthing process. She nurses them until they are about eight weeks old. Mother chinchillas even defend their kits by spitting at potential harassers.
you need a cage, accessories -- food dishes, water bottles, dust, quality food, chinchilla safe chew toys, bedding, a good wheel [no pet stores have safe chinchilla wheels].
they should be given a dust bath on a regular basis every day and fed and watered ,too
Yes, bats take care of their young. The young are all together in a 'nursery', where all mothers take care of their young. Each mother bat can recognise the cry of her young.
Yes a Mother Wolf cares for their young ones they take care of them until they can hunt and survive on their own
How long does a mother cougar take care of her babies
They don't the squid leave there young to survive in the wild
Guppies do not care for their young. In fact, when the baby guppy is born, it must immediately find a place to hide to avoid being eaten by the mother.
The young is watched over by a pod. And they have an "Aunt" That is somehow related to the mother, but not the sister. So the Aunt and Mother do the major care taking, But the whole pod tries to protect all young.
The tigers take care of there young by the mother tiger nurses her young for about three to six months. After that the cubs are confined to the den and left unattented.
Sharks do not raise their young. Great white sharks are ovoviviparous, meaning that the eggs say inside the mother's body and continue to develop until leaving the mother's body. After birthing, the young sharks swim off, as sharks are cannibalistic, and will not hesitate to eat their own offspring.
that is NOT true rabbits ARE easy to take care of and if you get them when they are young and hold them,play with them,they will LOVE to be held AND played with.Trust me on this I have three rabbits,to of which are young and LOVE to play.
no they don't the mother and father animals stay together but the group comes second to their young
the mother watched over them and when they were old enough they hunted with the dad
A mother whale stays with its young for at least a year.