It turned out to be Pyometra http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyometra We brought her to the vet and had surgery and is doing fine she could have eaten poison i would get her to the vets
my unspayed small (not dwarf) rabbit lived to be 6 years. I would assume it was cancer that took her since I have been reading that there is a 80% chance that unspayed females get uterine cancer.
not spayed not having the ovaries removed: said of a female animal
Unspayed dogs have a greater chance of getting breast cancer and uterus problems such as pyometra (infection in the uterus). Because of these problems statistics show that generally spayed dogs live longer than unspayed dogs.
Needs serious answer.Lighter Sideyeah, pregnant
No. Its best to just get them spayed, unless you want your cat to have kittens. !!
They mark around either. They can't really tell the difference whether they are spayed or not.
A male cat is referred to as a tom, and an unspayed female is called a queen. Spayed females are sometimes called a molly.
There can be several different reasons; the cat could not have been trained properly, the litterbox could be too full, the cat could be stressed out or sick. All of the above can be fixed with time.
A tomcat is the name given to an un-neutered male cat. They are often called simply "toms." An unspayed female cat is called a "queen."
An intact male ferret is called a hob. An unspayed female is called a jill. A neutered male is a gib. A spayed female is a sprite.
If the male has not been neutered and/or the female has not been spayed, then yes. And unneutered dog can get any unspayed female dog pregnant.
Unspayed females have shorter lifespans and tend to develop mammary cancer easier than a spayed female.