no once it is done its done
Another answer:Sorry, the answer above is not correct. My vet cautioned me that males remain fertile for up to two weeks after neutering because of what is in the pipeline, so to speak, which can survive for at least that long. I don't know about three weeks, but if the dog's "little guys" are extremely hardy, it seems possible.I had my dog neutered on January 21st. 2 months later my female went into heat. We had no worries as the vet had explained nothing could happen. We came home from work and they were stuck together. About a month later we noticed her getting fat. She only goes in the back yard and has never gotten out or lost. Now my female is very pregnant. You can feel the puppies. We also had her checked and, well it was positive. I cant explain it. I just know it happened.
yes, but can obviously not get her pregnant
If the male has not been neutered and/or the female has not been spayed, then yes. And unneutered dog can get any unspayed female dog pregnant.
If the 6 month one dog has tedticles and is sexually mature and neither if them are neutered, yes.
Once the ovaries and uterus have been removed from a female dog, it is impossible for her to get pregnant. If a bitch 'believed' to have been spayed does get pregnant, it must then become obvious that the dog was never spayed.
Yes
mate it with a male dog
A dog can be neutered at any age after 6 months.
The risk of a dog developing certain types of cancer is reduced if the dog is neutered.
a dog doing this is likely in his 'teenage' years, with his hormones running wild inside his body. If the dog is going to be a long-term pet, the responsible thing to do is have him neutered. Leave the breeding of dogs to professionals. Once your dog has been neutered, this behavior will likely stop.
A neutered male dog is often referred to as a "neutered male" or simply a "neutered dog." Neutering is a surgical procedure that removes the testicles of a male dog to prevent reproduction.
The sterile dog can not cause/have puppies, either because it has been spayed/neutered, or because of genetic issues.
no