Yes Yes Yes
When the puppies are 7-10 weeks or less.
vitamins
Puppies already know how to poop. Edit: The original answer is incorrect. Puppies need stimulation to poop and urinate when they are first born. Typically the mother will lick the puppy to get it to urinate or poop, but if the owner needs to assist then you can use a warm paper towel on their stomach and anus to get them to use the bathroom. This is very important until they can do it on their own, which is about 2 weeks after birth typically.
The Mother licks their bunghole, if you are bottle feeding puppies better get a dental dam.
Nurse, pee, poop, and sleep.
The first stool/poop a newborn pup/human takes is a very sticky greenish black and is called meconium.
There are a couple of reasons why:1. They're cannibals.2. They may not of recognized their child's scent (another way to deal with this is by abondoning them).
If they are pooping excessively, they may be sick. But all animals and humans must poop at sometime or another...
In the short run this is not harmful to the dogs. All it does is give them really bad breath. If the dog continues to eat poop throughout their lives then this could lead to bigger more complex problems, such as the autoimmune disease, lupus.
It is said and claimed by the company that they can not. However, I do know some people who ''have puppies'', and not the normal nintindog pups either. My theory is that someone in the company messed up the coding and actual unknowingly put that in, or what the people think is pups is actually their dog pooping. ((Yes, nintindogs can poop in your house!))
husky puppy's should sleep inside because they might get sick or maybe they die if they are already sick
Small puppies cannot poop randomly. They must be stimulated in order to poop. At first they are stimulated by their mother licking their abdomens and genitalia. As they get older they are stimulated by waking, exercising, eating, and drinking. Until a pup is three months old they don't have control of the sphincters that release feces, so housetraining focuses on maintaining a schedule based on what stimulates them. From three months to six months of age the pup gradually develops more and more control of his own body functions. By six months he has the physical ability to control when feces are released. If he has been raised properly he will know by then were the preferred place to toilet is, will prefer keeping his den (the home) clean, and will attempt to "hold it" until given the opportunity to go outside to toilet.