If i want to mate our rats?

we have a male grey hooded and a female thin on top and i was thinking of wanting babies.

do we just put them together to mate? i mean after we capture them acquainted?

and is it safe for the female if she is smaller than the male>?

and what do you expect the chances of having a hairless surrounded by the litter>?
Actually at first just let them meet eachother and they will draw from used to eachother so then you leave them together. No there is no problem whether the male is bigger because most of the time the male will me pretty big and the female small. The probability of getting a hairless would be maybe one or none because I had a receding rat with a haired rat and we mostly always got one thin on top out of them.
Make sure that they like eachother first other wise they could shutting up hurting eachother. I suggest letting them play in a bathroom or something. Then just tolerate them do there thing in the hold. I'm warning you they will have LOTS of babies so be ready to own many baby rats. The female might bring a little trampled on because of her size but i dont know. I have 4 female rats and they don't hurt eachother at adjectives. I do no know the chance of having hairless rats within the litter sorry!
Dont do it!! because there are many rats that are unwanted i the world. if you want more rats why dont u freshly co to ur anial shelter!
you should let them sedel and then put them together.BUT stay there only in case they don't like respectively other.And the chances of having a hair smaller number rat is probably 20 % to 50%.
Answers:    Female hairless rats usually have a intensely hard time raising a litter, for reasons not properly embedded they have trouble pro ducing enough milk to keep their babies alive. For this function I do not recommend this pairing--when people breed hairless rats they usually will mate balding males to haired females which carry the gene for hairlessness. There is a very angelic chance that you will either 1) lose all of the babies from the litter 2) hold to handraise the babies yourself.

Breeding any animal simply because you "want babies" is a bad idea. You are putting the health of your feminine at risk--not to mention the fact that it can be very hard to find homes for adjectives of the babies. If you really want to experience the birthing process of rats you should contact a local shelter and see if you can adopt a pregnant female.

You will probably not get any bald rats in the litter. The gene for hairlessness is recessive, meaning that within order for a rat to be hairless it needs to own two copies of the gene: however if you were to mate the resulting babies together you would get 50% haired rats and 50% thin on top rats.
As much fun as it sounds...
DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO ITDONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO ITDONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO ITDONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!! DONT DO IT!!
DON'T you could have up to 20 babies and there are many rats that necessitate homes and if you give them away that will give somebody a lift away from there homes. If you are going to keep some why not only adopt: petfinder.com
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