A baby should be removed from the breast only after it has had its fill of breast milk for the moment. Often times the baby will show it is done eating by falling asleep peacefully and quietly knowing it is loved by a caring mother who is giving it the very best.
A baby's first milk should ideally be breast-milk from the baby's mother. If breast feeding is not possible, or wanted, then specially formulated baby milk should be used.
Breast milk is wonderful in that it imparts what the mother eats to her nursing baby. This is great when the mother is taking in good food and nutrition. Real bad when she has a disease such as HIV. When a baby nurses from her HIV positive mother there is a very high chance that the baby will contract this disease. Having a disease such as HIV is one of the few reasons a mother should not breast feed.
You should never, under any circumstances, remove a baby hamster from the mother.
breast feedin
no because you should not because different hamsters breast feed
To store milk that the mother will feed her baby.
Formula, if it comes from a can, breast milk if it comes from the baby's mother.
A mother breast feeding her baby is a fantastic example of loving maternal care.
HIV can be transmitted through breast milk when a mother living with HIV passes the virus to her baby through breastfeeding. The virus can be present in breast milk and can infect the baby if the mother is not on antiretroviral treatment.
While breast feeding, it is certainly possible for a mother to get an infection in her breast. The breast is usually hot and painful to the touch. It is not dangerous to nurse your baby with an infection, and it is actually recommended that you nurse more frequently. http://www.breastfeedingbasics.com/html/breast_infections.shtml
Baby food... breast milk...
Of course you can. If you are breast feeding, some foods the mother eats can give the baby gas, but watermelon should be fine- it is a rather healthy food, in fact.