You should never put mice or any other rodent of different species together. They will attack eachother, and most likely kill eachother if it gets to the extreme.
No . . . if they were, then they would be called mice!
no gerbils think mice are very mean, rotten and smelly
One reason is gerbils have furry tails unlike mice having naked tails. Mice are a little smaller than gerbils. Third gerbils are much more active then mice. And finally mice normaly have much bigger ears than gerbils. I hope this helps.
Gerbils and mice are two different animals.
Yes, mice are smaller than gerbils, but I think gerbils are the right size.
The collective nouns for 'mice' are:a nest of micea plague of micea horde of micea cluster of micea mischief of mice
they are similar, but not the same. they are both rodents, but have different shaped faces, and mice are slightly smaller. gerbils have fury tails, mice have hairless ones.gerbils hop on their hind legs, mice crawl around. gerbils smell less, are more inteligent (usually), and become more tame (usually). mice are the easiest small pet to look after as they are the least inteligent small animal. gerbils are more fun, and still very easy to look after. most people prefer pet gerbils to pet mice.
Absolutely not. Gerbils are highly territorial and you cannot even introduce a lone adult to a lone adult without a splitcage. It is highly likely that the gerbil would just kill the mouse. Cohabiting different types of rodents is never advised, and there are very, very few examples where it can be successful many of which are isolated incidents. Even where successful, the company of another species can never substitute for company of their own kind.
To eat? Nope To live with? Nope
Dry Quality dog food
Mice, lemmings, hamsters, Gerbils, muskrat..
No. Cohabiting different types of rodents can result in the death of one or all of your pets. Rats kill mice, a behaviour known as muricide and gerbils and syrian hamsters are both extremely territorial and would kill any intruder.