Yes, A mother Dog cannot be trusted around anyone or anything when she has contracted Rabies, Just like any other animal, once they have the disease anything that comes into their path is a free attack as far as they're concerned.
DEFINITELY NOT. Well, that would actually depend on the circumstances. A well civilized dog with a nice home and owner, would definitely NOT eat her puppies. But a unhealthy, flea infested, rib showing, starving dog who just had puppies on the street MIGHT, just might, eat her puppies. But most likely the mother would scavenge for other food to keep her AND her pups alive.
NO it is not okay separate the puppies from the mother. Yes, just like a human mother they eat food, they get more milk and for the mother dog she gets twice more milk in her breasts
For the first few weeks, puppies are nursed on milk produced by the mother dog. As the pups develop they need to start transitioning to solid food. If assistance from the breeder is not available to produce gruel for the puppies to eat, the mother dog will eat and partially digest food which she then vomits for the puppies to eat. This sustains the puppies while they practice eating solid food until they are able to digest it themselves.
If the some of the puppies are stillborn, the mother may eat any them. If there are no stillborns, nothing will eat the puppies. ~
Puppies will begin to eat dog food once they are weaned from their mother's milk, around six weeks of age.
no ppl who eat dogs will not get rabies i blve if someone eat dog get rabies because no one cant eat dog oh my god
Dog food!
vitamins
The mother will eat of the sack that the puppy is in then move it to a suitable area. The mother in days time may step onto a pup. This is completely normal.
Puppies are 3 days old...
Standard dog food would be difficult for puppies to eat and digest but it is not 'bad' for them in the sense that it is poison.
i think they eat/drink their mom's milk
Rabies is fairly uncommon on groundhogs but it has happened and Is definitely possible. Almost any mammal can get rabies. Animals like mice, rats, squirrels and groundhogs, are not very common to get rabies but can and does happen. Dogs, cats, foxes, cows and other mammals can all get rabies but birds fish and snakes can not.