Yes if you let them... either get them fixed or keep them separated when one is in heat...
That is completely normal, it's how dogs show their dominance towards other dogs.
A litter of puppies.
No, dogs and cats cannot crossbreed and produce offspring. They are two different species with a different number of chromosomes, making it biologically impossible for them to reproduce together.
While dogs may have a general sense of familiarity with their offspring, their ability to recognize them after months may be limited. Dogs rely more on scent than visual cues, so reunions may be more successful if the mother or offspring still carry the same scent as before. Overall, the level of recognition can vary among individual dogs.
Yes, dogs and wolves can interbreed and produce fertile offspring. Dogs and wolves belong to the same genus, Canis, and can produce viable offspring known as wolfdogs or wolf hybrids. However, breeding between the two is generally discouraged due to concerns about behavior, genetics, and ethics.
it depends on how much sexual intercourse you have. it is up to you.
Puppies.
Yes they can.
That is completely normal, it's how dogs show their dominance towards other dogs.
The offspring of golden retrievers, as with all dogs in general, are known as puppies.
They were either abandoned by their owner or the offspring of feral or stray dogs.
Yes brine shrimp can have intercourse. Males and females can produce sexually, but also females can produce offspring asexually (parthenogenesis). Females can live up tp three months and produce up to 300 offspring every 4 days. Any other questions just ask Symantha Bollinger.
A litter of puppies.
They sleep, eat, hunt, be solitary together, protect their young and create offspring aka intercourse
No, dogs and cats cannot crossbreed and produce offspring. They are two different species with a different number of chromosomes, making it biologically impossible for them to reproduce together.
as long as they get together and as long as they are both horses, yes, there will be offspring.
While dogs may have a general sense of familiarity with their offspring, their ability to recognize them after months may be limited. Dogs rely more on scent than visual cues, so reunions may be more successful if the mother or offspring still carry the same scent as before. Overall, the level of recognition can vary among individual dogs.