No, because when he gets, fixed they cut the testicles right off of the poor guy.
Expanded Answer:
Male dogs are fixed by a procedure known as a bilateral orchidectomy. This involves the removal of both testicles.
Reversal would require replacement of the "original equipment" (which is unlikely as organs are viable for only a short time after removal), or replacement with a donor organ (which might provide breed specific genetic material if from a similar breed but not hold true to the bloodlines unless a male sibling was the source). This second procedure could be very costly.
If you are into replacement just for looks, there are neutricles (prosthetic testicles made of silicon) which will duplicate the original appearance but not the original function.
On the edge of science - a new set could be grown by using the dog's stem cells. This procedure will likely not be available for many years (or seven times that many in dog years)
No, once a female dog has been spayed (fixed), her reproductive organs have been surgically removed and she cannot be "unfixed" to regain the ability to reproduce.
An unfixed dog still has hormonal urges and will mount anything it can, regardless of whether the other animal is receptive. Please spay or neuter your pet.
Yes My dog Peter has locked with my female do numerous times. My female dog also was not in heat at the time. It is actually a regular occurance in my household and my male dog has been fixed for 2 years now.
The female should be spayed (fixed) at about 6 months. Some believe that she should have a litter before being spayed, but the only thing that does is add more unwanted dogs to the dog pound.
To show dominance. They are above the other dog or they want to be leader.
he should get fixed
Strictly from a population standpoint it still makes a difference. Most cats maintain a territory, they can overlap but they will defend the area they live in. If a male is defending a territory and is unfixed he will try to impregnate every available female. If he is fixed he will still run off other males but be unable to mate.
"Tom"
Yes as long as the male dog is not fixed
If your male dog is not already neutered, neuter him.
Yes. It definitely happened to my dog.
they could but they wouldnt do it