No. Cats are born with a particular number of nipples. They will not grow new ones when they give birth.
A cat can have as many as ten kittens, or as few as one or two, but the only thing that matters is how many she can nurse. The average number of nipples on a cat is eight, but some cats have only six nipples. Also she may not be able to produce enough milk for a large litter.
This is an indication that she is a high milk producing sow, the more nipples she has the more milk she will be able to produce to feed the litter. The number of nipples does not affect the number of piglets she will reproduce.
I think the standard issue number of nipples is 8, but I just noticed my cat Dwight has 10....apparently this is quite rare !!
A north American opossum can have up 13 nipples/teats because that number reflects the amount a species can have in a litter. The opossum can have up to 13 offspring at once.
No, goats are just built to have two mammary glands with two teats.
No - but you need to make sure that the teats your doe has do not have any faults so that the kids when born can easily suckle.
It is called a liter
The same number of babies left on your mothers face last night!
The amount of kittens has nothing to do with the number of litters. However, the more litters a cat has, the less likely the babies will be healthy so they have less chances of surviving. Too many littrs can also cause problems to the mother
no
Yes
the amount of fish, the amount of people fishing, the temperature for fishing season, and pollution