Young dibblers are weaned at 3-4 months of age.
3 - 4 Years. Like a hamster.
They look after their young for about 1 year
they do not look after their young
Around 1,000
As long as they possibly can. They will fight and feed their young until you take them away from them.
Dibblers are small, carnivorous, native marsupials of Australia. The main reasons why dibblers became endangered have been predation by introduced species such as feral cats, wild dogs and foxes. Competition with introduced species of mice has resulted in lower populations, as has changed fire regimes and habitat degradation.
Dibblers, though small, are exceedingly aggressive and will fight for their survival against predators. Animals which eat dibblers include owls, quolls and introduced predators such as foxes and feral cats.
to look young sometimes
up to 9 to ten months. then they look nice and preety
They usually look after them for about six weeks.
They don't look after them at all. The young are fully capable of caring for themselves at birth.
If you mean from when the egg is layed to when it hatches, that answer is not very long, when the egg is layed, the fathers look after the eggs, while the mothers go to collect food for the unhatched young, in preparation for when they hatch. after they hatch i have no clue how long they look after their young, but most penguins live in groups or even large groups almost like colonies.