You payed for the litter? YOU DID. You don't split anything. You just.... die.
This can vary. Whether or not the stud dog's owner gets the pick of the litter should be negotiated ahead of breeding, along with stud fees.
All that should be worked out in a Stud Contract. That is a matter of your agreement with the owner of the stud dog. Things can be different if you are not the legal owner of the female. In a typical stud contract the stud owner will have pick of the litter to be selected at 6-8 weeks. You can pay for stud service and be required to surrender a puppy to the stud owner. The stud owner will need to sign the litter registration so it is necessary to keep that in mind and the female (dam) owner will have to sign also. If you are not the owner of record for the dam or the stud then you have little leverage.
A Billy goat can be kept with does for breeding purposes throughout the breeding season, which typically lasts 2-3 months. It is recommended to separate the Billy goat from the does after breeding to prevent overbreeding and ensure proper management of the herd.
Another name for an elephant owner is a "mahout." Mahouts are individuals responsible for caring for and training elephants in Asian cultures.
If you plan on breeding i suggest you read up on it first and always have a Vet check you dog before you plan on doing this sort of thing. Smaller breeds can have problems when giving birth and breeding a dog is not a small chore. I have breed dogs for years and you as an owner need to make sure your dog is healthy before breeding a potential gene defect into a new litter
This can vary. Whether or not the stud dog's owner gets the pick of the litter should be negotiated ahead of breeding, along with stud fees.
Whomever was the registered owner at the time of the breeding would be the one to register the litter. AKC would consider that person to be the breeder, and the legal owner of the litter.
You can lose your Litter License if the following occurs:1) You're a horrible pet owner and you neglect your puppies and the mother while they're weaning. If this happens, the consequences are severe. They'll take ALL the puppies away from you on your side of the litter, AND the mother. If you have the father, they'll take all the puppies on your side of the litter. After that you'll get whatever litter licenses you have on your account revoked (taken away from you), and you'll be suspended from breeding for a certain time frame, until you learn some respect for virtual pets and what the responsibility is that comes with breeding them.2) You lose your Litter License when you breed. Only 1 breeding session per license. If you breed your pet, you've spent your LL. You'll need to buy another Litter License if you want to breed again.3) You lose your Litter License if you sell it in the FooMart (obviously)4) You lose your Litter License if you delete your account (obviously)5) You lose your Litter License if you gift it to another member (obviously)
Unless there are 14 nipples no. Sometimes the owner will have to feed the additional puppies or another dog (or cat) that has had a recent litter.
Equity or Owner's Equity.
I Know this doesn't have to do with this, but Cats Are NOT Attracted to Litter Boxes. If they poop in your garden and you know where they like to poop put a litter box in that spot. For some reason they don't come to another spot, they just stop doing it. If they continue talk to the owner of the cat.
It means where someone buys a hotel in Another Country and the money made goes back to the country on which the hotel owner lives in, so the country doesn't make money
The money will probably be found out and returned to the owner. Yes, it is wrong to keep other peoples hard earned money.
Your expected savings may not add up to very much initially, but over time you will notice your wallet getting heavier. Cat litter, to a cat owner, is an essential product that always needs to be purchased, so why not save as much money as you can?
The owner of the dam. Not to forget that the owner of the stallion cant prove that it was his horse covering the mare. So lucky for the mare owner XD
Yes, the female hamster can produce more than one litter a year. She can usually have as many litters as the owner wantsher to have!
All that should be worked out in a Stud Contract. That is a matter of your agreement with the owner of the stud dog. Things can be different if you are not the legal owner of the female. In a typical stud contract the stud owner will have pick of the litter to be selected at 6-8 weeks. You can pay for stud service and be required to surrender a puppy to the stud owner. The stud owner will need to sign the litter registration so it is necessary to keep that in mind and the female (dam) owner will have to sign also. If you are not the owner of record for the dam or the stud then you have little leverage.