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No they are unable to reproduce until they are fully grown and mature.
A mother lynx nurtures its young until they are one year of age thus ready to reproduce.
No, that is the proper method for marinating fish. You need to keep fresh fish refrigerated until you are ready to cook it.
They are able to reproduce at around 18 months but aren't fully mature until 2-3 years.
If you mean mine personally, then yes they could. But I'll assume your question is "when is your hamster ready to mate?" They can reproduce at 6 weeks, but for the hamsters health, its best to wait until they are a few months old. But breeding is not advised. Really.
Since a cow is a mature female bovine, she has the potential to always be "ready" to be slaughtered if she's culled from the herd for a certain reason. Of course, others state that cows are never ready to be slaughtered, but that's based on human opinion. We humans never know if a cow is ever "ready" to be slaughtered or not.
Daphnia reproduce usually in the spring until the end of the summer.
They are spawned in fresh water then make their way to the sea where they stay until they are ready to breed then will return to their place of birth, so most of their life is spent in sea water.
Some reptiles give live birth. Others (in particular, certain snake species) actually keep the eggs inside their body until they are just about ready to hatch.
No, a triploid fish is a fish genetically altered at birth to not reproduce or to reach sexual maturity, so that insted of using energy to become sexually mature it uses that energy to keep eating and growing until it dies. Therefore they can grow MUCH larger than wild fish, although this is not always the case.
It will keep going until is ready to stop.
Well it depends when he's ready You have to wait until he's interested this can take possibly a year sence girls mature faster than boys