Generally, the younger the mother, the better for both mother and baby
Baby rabbits can be safely separated from their mother at around 8 weeks of age.
the baby and the mother
YES! The baby only eats what the mother eats. If a pregnant mother is starving, so is her baby.
Yes he has a baby at the age of 19 and the mother is only 17
depends the type of whale, gender, if it's pregnant and it's age EG. if a baby dies at a young age that means that the chain of that family will stop and that could be a problem because if that baby had a baby of it's own then that baby has another baby and so on. And if it was a whale with a baby the baby wouldn't survive without it's mother.
This depends on the age, and how long the mouse is held. If it is a newborn, and it still greatly depends in it's mother, then chances are, it will. However, if your just poke the baby, it will have no affect. You have to have held it for long enough that your scent covers the thing, instead of its mother's.
five to eight months
no it all in the genetics and the chromsomes
Baby rabbits can be separated from their mother at around 8 weeks of age, when they are weaned and able to eat solid food on their own.
Baby hamsters leave their mother at three weeks old.
it is the mercy between the mother and the baby, also the mercy from the mammoth toward the baby.
Baby elephants nurse for up to two years of age.