A newborn pinkie mouse is best cared for by a momma mouse. Your chances of hand-rearing it are very small. If, however, momma mouse is nowhere to be found and you cannot get a "milker mouse" from a pet shop, a pinkie mouse can be fed kitten replacement milk (or KMR) from a pet shop. It must be fed this every two hours, without fail, or it will die.
Chances are, unless you know for a fact momma died, she wasn't far from her litter of pups. It's best to leave a nest of mouse pups alone.
Good luck.
A pinkie mouse is a newborn mouse that is hairless and blind. In the ecosystem, pinkie mice serve as prey for predators such as snakes, birds of prey, and other carnivorous animals. They help maintain the balance of the food chain by providing a food source for these predators.
A baby mouse is called a pup or a pinkie.
You should feed them on 'pinkies' - newborn baby mice. They are available from any reptile shop (or should be !) Feed one pinkie, once a week unless the snake is shedding - in which case feed a couple of days after it's shed. Don't forget to thaw the pinkie out before feeding !
pinkie
you feed it one pinkie everyday so seven pinkie's.
you can bye a other mouse that has milk in her body and see if it take cares if the baby mouse
No, but you could feed it a rat.......
A mini-mouse.
it is know as a baby mouse
No, it's not advisable to feed a pinkie (a baby mouse or rat) regular milk. Baby rodents are typically lactose intolerant, and feeding them milk can cause digestive issues. Instead, they should be fed a specialized milk replacer designed for rodents or appropriate formula until they are old enough to eat solid food.
You can buy formula at the store. It's the best thing you could feed such a young mouse. It's just like sucking on the mothers mammory glands. (nipples)
it is known as the Doe (the male is a Buck and the young as Pup, Pinkie or Kittens)