Not the mother, but the father might try so keep him away!
Have fun!
its a breed on its own. you can not take a rex or lionhead and just "make" a loop bunny.
maybe but she must have their own litter that is the same age as their own.
When the American Goldfinch are 11 months old, they are able to breed and raise their own young. The breeding season is late June until the end of the summer, they have 2-7 babies per clutch and they might have 2 nests per season.
You need to get the boy in the cage to breed and after that you put the boy in his own cage but if you keep the boy and girl together intill they have babies the boy will eat the babies.
No he did not, but he did own horses.
An alligator does not feed its babies. As soon as a baby alligator hatches, it must start looking for its own food. As long as it looks for food in the vicinity of the mother, the mother will eat anything that tries to eat her baby but other that that, the baby is on its own.
The meadowlark eat their own babies. the throw up the food and the adult takes and eats te vomit.
The aquatic trapdoor snail is a livebearer. It needs two snails to reproduce, but it would be possible for them to be purchased pregnant then have babies on their own.
You don't. Mice will breed whenever and wherever they can, and they are quite happy with their own nests. If you wish, place some nesting materials, such as straw, grass and paper away fromthe babies, and let the mice make their own nest.If human interfere, they are more likely to kill and eat the babies. Whatever you do, do not touch the young ones.
What a sweet question ! Honestly - your bunny will be quite fine on its own. In the wild, they wouldn't share a den with other bunnies (unless it was a mother taking care of her babies). The problem putting fluffy toys in with a bunny is - the bunny might eat some of the material the toy is made from (bunnies like to nibble !) - and it could make their insides hurt, which means you would have to take it to a vet.
A scientist who regularly tests on rats will usually breed their own as rats breed very easily and have many babies in one litter. This also helps them to reduce the risk of the rat having an underlying disease or illness.
Adult guppies eat their own babies, and fish like tuna eat guppies.