Papers don't matter when you are breeding dogs. The only problem you will have is registering the puppies.
Unless you want to bring unwanted puppies in this world, plus be sued for big bucks, I would play it safe and do what the contract says... plus neuter my dog. P.S it's PUPPIES not "puppys" dimwit.
If the female dog is a mix breed but the male is a purebred lab, the puppies would be considered a mix of the two breeds. The puppies will inherit characteristics from both parents, making them a mix breed.
It would get little puppies inside her.
it depends on the breeds its mixed with
Yes, you can breed an AKC-registered male to an APRA-registered female; however, the resulting puppies would not be eligible for AKC registration. The AKC (American Kennel Club) and APRA (American Pet Registry, Inc.) are separate organizations with different registration standards. If you wish to register the puppies, you would need to do so through APRA or another registry that recognizes both parents.
If the dogs are UKC and one is ADBA then yes you can register them both.
If you want to show it.
The best place to start would be a website such as Pure Bred Puppies or Puppy Find. General information about this breed of dog can be found at Dog Breed Info.
When you register for the game you will have the option of choosing which breed and type of horse or pony you would like.
Species breed within their own species. In fact, it would be impossible anatomically for cats and dogs to inter-breed. So cats birth only kittens; dogs birth only puppies.
No they can't- I wish they could, the puppies would be sooo cute!
No, for two reasons. First, the pitbull is a distinct breed, so crossing a toy poodle with a pitbull would result in mixed-breed puppies, not pitbull puppies. Second, and probably more importantly, toy poodles are much smaller than pitbulls, by a factor of 8-10x. It would be close to impossible to breed a male pitbull to a female toy poodle, and the fetal-maternal mismatch in sizes would likely result in difficulty during birth or even death of both the mother and the puppies.