yes there are in fact! xD when a mare is close to giving birth, she may pace around her stall, look at her side, look as if shes in pain, lay down and get up, and just like humans her water will break so if you see a wet patch youll know your close.
The word to fill in the blank is "gosling". A mare gives birth to a foal, similarly a goose gives birth to a gosling.
Not without a very careful and costly ultrasound examination.
Horses reproduce sexually, with a mare and a stallion mating to produce offspring. After mating, the fertilized egg develops in the mare's uterus for around 11 months before she gives birth to a foal. The foal will then grow and mature into an adult horse.
This can vary in breeds. It can be a week before the birth, just after the milk bag waxes. It can be the day of the birth. Milk is produced about 24 to48 hours after birth. The milk bag will produce colostrum first. This is vital to the foal. It contains antibodies the foal needs for fighting off diseases.
A foal typically stands within 1-2 hours after birth, but it can vary depending on the individual foal and circumstances. It's important for the foal to stand and nurse soon after birth to receive vital colostrum from the mare.
Yes, a foal can die before birth.
The word to fill in the blank is "gosling". A mare gives birth to a foal, similarly a goose gives birth to a gosling.
a mare gives birth to the foal eleven months after conception
Not without a very careful and costly ultrasound examination.
It normally takes 11 months for a mare before she gives birth, but occasionally it will be 10 or 12 months.
A cat "queens" or is the act of "queening" when she gives birth to her kittens. :)
Horses reproduce sexually, with a mare and a stallion mating to produce offspring. After mating, the fertilized egg develops in the mare's uterus for around 11 months before she gives birth to a foal. The foal will then grow and mature into an adult horse.
To prevent the foal from becoming infected with Parascaris equorum you would have to clean the udders and teats before foaling.
It makes your horse in gestation, and it will produce a foal in 12 months. That means you will have to wait 6 days before your mare gives birth. You can use aging points to hurry it up.
=no you can not take a mare away from its foal straight after its birth=
A foal
This can vary in breeds. It can be a week before the birth, just after the milk bag waxes. It can be the day of the birth. Milk is produced about 24 to48 hours after birth. The milk bag will produce colostrum first. This is vital to the foal. It contains antibodies the foal needs for fighting off diseases.