Do you stipulation to seize feminine rabbits neuter?
Im thinking about buying a female dwarf rabbit do they need to be neuter will they mark there territory out side of their coop?
If there are no males around its not really crucial, sometimes it makes them less territorial about their cage but to be honest I wouldnt put one through the surgery for that reason, theyre such little creatures it must be a stress on their bodies.
In my opinion female rabbit should be spayed. If done by a well brought-up vet with rabbit experience, risks are minimal and they recover quickly! I enjoy had over 50 rabbits altered (mostly females), and NO complications of any sort. There are both health benefits to spaying and behavioral benefits. Female rabbits often become incredibly aggressive and territorial at old age (usually begins around 4-8 months of age). They will chase you, grunt, lunge, bite, and generally be quite unpleasant. Some females do urine flaw as well. As far as health-wise, 85%!! of female rabbits will contract reproductive cancers by the age of 5. It is other fatal. Spaying your rabbit, on average, will DOUBLE her lifespan from an average of 4-5 years to an average of 8-10 years (and even more). The very small surgical risk is worth it. No surgery that will double someone's lifespan would be considered unnecessary, would it??
Best too if you don't want loads of them. They are nice so how much room do you have, enough for a warren?
Hi.I've be raising and showing rabbits for 10 years. I never recommend any rabbits being spayed or neutered. It is honestly, a dribble away of money and most importantly an unnecessary risk and pain to the rabbits. I don't have any house rabbits, but if you litter train her or single have her out of her cage for a little while (meaning not multiple hours) next you shouldn't have to worry as much about her going to the bathroom contained by your house, but it would just be an accident not her marking her realm, that's more of a male thing. Most claim that spaying a rabbit will help their temperament and identity, but I have some breeding bucks (males) and does (females) that are the sweetest rabbits you could ever find and had fixed rabbits bite me and vice versa. So it really just boils down to the individual rabbit's sense of self and how much attention and handling it recieves. Hope this helps and please feel free to contact me with any other question you may have.
A Female Rabbit would need to be spayed whether you wish her not to breed , I do not Beleive that you should have territory mark issues otherwise. She's a rabbit , not a cat , although if left to roam free , she will chew on nearly anything around , furniture , Babels , wires ETC.
You can avoid that by coating electrical lines with a mixture of chillipowder , crushed Cayenne and petroleum Jelly
First of all... You don't get anything female neuter, you get them spayed.. boys get neutered.
And no, you don't inevitability to get her spayed, you just need to keep hold of boy rabbits away from her so she doesn't get pregnant!
Flute is completely right. Please dont listen to those who say its not needed, its their judgment and they need to do research. An altered bunny can live to be 8-12. But an unaltered female will likely die by the age of three from cancer. Plus everything that flute said more or less the social and behavior issues.
No, you don't have to her neutered, but she could obtain pregnant if you have a male rabbit and can't capture her spayed.
Answers: Yes - spaying is highly recommended for three main reasons:
1) Health
Female rabbits commonly suffer from uterine cancer - which is the most adjectives cause of early death surrounded by female rabbits. This disease is completely prevented by spaying - so if you want your rabbit to live a full and healthy duration spaying is vital.
2) Social life
Rabbits are a social species and should have the company of their own humane. However, unneutered rabbits (of either sex) are more likely to squabble - neutering help them to get along. The best pairing of rabbits is usually male and womanly - in which case they obviously inevitability to be neutered to prevent babies!
3) Behaviour
Not territory marking necessarily, but efmale rabbits can develop mixed unwanted behaviours such as nesting and aggression. These are reduced if not prevented by spaying.
For more info check out:
http://www.rabbitwelfare.co.uk/resources...
your thinking of a boy girls cant obtain neutered they get spayed