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No, mixing different species is not recommended and may end up in the death of the mouse or hamster, or both. The hamster could also chew off the mouse's tail.
juvenile bovine
Your mouse has necrosis. This is either from the mouse biting its tail, or more probable, someone pinched its tail. Sometimes it kills the mouse, other times it drops off and the mouse will be fine.
no. no.no.no.no.no.no. if you do, the tail will come off.
The little mouse's tail was cut out with a silver butter knife.
because the tip of the tail might come off.
She has lost her tail because a bug has chewed part of it off. You see, when dogs get fleas, the fleas work together. they go to the base of the dogs tail. they then begin the hard work. they chew on it. the dogs tail then falls off!
It depends how injured it is. My mouse had part of its tail cut, the part simply died off slowly, and a shorter stubby tail developed. The problem will be probably fixed over time but take the mouse to vet asap just incase.
Our mouse had a purple tail (just on the end, about 1-2") turning black and falling off, due to a fight with another mouse that damaged the tail and caused lack of blood supply. The vet gave both oral and topical antibiotics. He also told us that IF it spread to the base of tail, that was the spinal cord and mouse would need to be euthanized. (If that happens, the mouse would die in a lot of pain and it can't be fixed.) We had a happy ending: the damaged end of the tail fell off, everything else healed, and the mouse continues to live a happy and active life......in a separate cage! You need to get YOUR mouse to a vet for some antibiotics!
Yes, a mouse's tails can come off but they don't grow back.
It's possible that a juvenile bovine could chew the horse's tail off. To prevent this you can keep the tail in a tail bag, available as most feed and tack stores.
they say that the nerves are not that grown compared to the adults, so it would feel like a pinch for them...