Yes. Snow leopards are mammals and all mammals with the exception of monotremes (platypus and echidnas which are egg-laying mammals) give birth to live young.
No. Of course not. They're snow leopards, not tribbles.
Snow leopards tend to make sounds that are reminiscent of other large cats, they can moan, hiss, growl and yowl. They cannot, however, roar. Snow leopards mate from December to March. Snow leopards give birth after about 100 days of gestation, so the time line differs depending on when the cubs are conceived.
No, they are single until they mate and have cubs.
Male and female snow leopards are together for only a short time during the mating season. Snow leopards are not monogamous, they do not keep the same life partner.
The mating season for snow leopards is late winter and early spring, normally January to mid-March. Females have to be 2 or 3 years old, and males have to 4, before either can mate. When snow leopards find a mate, they stay together during a short period of time. They mate 12-36 times a day, in the usual felid posture, during which one snow leopard climbs on the other's back. Once the female is pregnant, the male leaves; he doesn't help raise the cubs. Female snow leopards can mate every other year, although they don't always. It is not known how often male snow leopards mate.
Snow leopards have keen hearing.
snow leopards do not migrate or hibernate
Panthers and other leopards
Snow Leopards do have enemies. It's enemy is a WOLF!
Snow leopards hunt alone.
snow leopards would die!
Yes, snow leopards live in dens.