No. After mating the male goes on his way, and the female guards the nest and cares for the young. In fact, adult gators of both sexes will eat little alligators.
Actually, some of them do, some of the time. A 2009 study suggests some female alligators do return to previous mates, sometimes for several years. Attached is a really interesting article on the subject.
American alligators travel great distances looking for mates. While searching for a mate, male alligators bellow often to announce their presence to females and to warn other males to stay away. They are very dangerous to humans when they migrate between wetlands during their searches for mates.
No, snakes do not mate for life. Each mating season, a male snake will find a female, regardless of whether she was his mate the previous year. The snakes then mate and go there separate ways. The father will probably never even see his offspring.
No, it is impossible. I wouldn't even want to try.
Monogamy is what having only one mate for life is called.
Alligators mate by performing courtship displays involving vocalizations, head-slapping, body posturing, and sometimes even bubble blowing. The male will mount the female in the water and fertilization occurs internally. After mating, the female alligator will build a nest and lay her eggs, which will hatch into baby alligators several months later.
no because they have no one to mate with.
Alligators start mating whe 8 to 13 old, when they have reached a length of 6 to 7 feet (1.8-2.1 meters).
American alligators travel great distances looking for mates. While searching for a mate, male alligators bellow often to announce their presence to females and to warn other males to stay away. They are very dangerous to humans when they migrate between wetlands during their searches for mates.
Ya they do
No, snakes do not mate for life. Each mating season, a male snake will find a female, regardless of whether she was his mate the previous year. The snakes then mate and go there separate ways. The father will probably never even see his offspring.
Alligators and Crocodiles are too distantly related to hybridize.
yes, they mate for life
Yes flamingos do mate for life.
No. Koalas do not mate for life. A dominant male will mate with as many females as he can.
Some do mate for life, but some don't.
no snails do not mate for life. they can have many mates.
sexually