My mouse and my friends mouse newly have pups. Now her mouse isn't taking keeping of the pups.?
My mouse had pups about 4 days ago, and hers were born nowadays can I put some of her pups in with mine mouse's pups? My mouse only have two, so she can take care of extra, but would she adopt them? If we put them in there with her would she start taking supervision of them and such?
NO YOU CANT DO THAT
SHE ITS REALLY DIFFICULT BECAUSE YOU CANT EVEN HANDLE THE BABIES AT THIS AGE BECAUSE THERE PINKIE AND VERY VERY FRAGILE.
THE BEST THING TO DO IS BUY A LITTLE SMALL TANK PUT PLENTY OF BEDDING IN THERE AND TAKE THEM TO THE VET THEY MITE GIVE YOU A MILK SUBSTANCE FOR THE BABIES TO FEED ON
BUT THE BEST THING TO DO IS GET THEM TO VET HE IS THE REALLY ONLY ONE WHO CAN HELP OR DON'T TAKE THEM JUST RING YOUR LOCAL VET OR GO UP THERE WITHOUT THEM AND JUST EXPLAIN TO THEM WHATS HAPPENING
AND HE CAN GIVE YOU ADVICE NEVER GET ADVICE OF THE INTERNET BECAUSE YOU CAN GO ON A DIFFERENT SIGHT WILL BE TALKING ABOUT THE SAME THING BUT TELLING YOU TO DO SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT. SO YER VETS DEFIANTLY.
I don't believe she would. Your mouse would most probably ignore the other babies. Never touch the babies, because the mother mouse is very aggressive at this stage, and she might give you a amazingly nasty bite. And even if your mouse accepts them, your friends mouse would be remarkably confused to where her babies have gone. Then your friend's mouse's babies are gonna think that your mouse is their mother. Mice aren't human. "I'll babysit your babe-in-arms today okay?" is never gonna happen among mice.
Answers: No! Mother mice EAT their young when they feel they are in exposure. Your friends babies might be seen as a threat and then she will eat them. It's horrible to risk and see DONT
NO never put them in near your mouse, your mouse WILL eat your friend's babies ones, mother will just know which is hers and which isn't hers by smelling different. I hope you haven't touched any of babies, have you? whether you did, mouse probably will eat the babies its because of smells changes once you touch or moved them.
OK, in the definite world taking pet mice to the vet is unlikely to happen, unless your vet works for free. Mice just don't get that sort of medical thinking - it's kind of like taking your pet fish to the vet. You just don't unless its a sensible breeder.
Mice also are fantastic babysitters of other mice babies. Don't know why people are saying that they will get through them. Was your mouse and your frfiends mouse from the same litter themselves? If so, it is likely they will help respectively other with the litters - put both mothers and the litters in together.
If they are strangers, then possibly things could shift wrong, or they will just simply ignore one another. But this is by no means unshakable. If you can carefully transfer the entire family (incl mum) into the other enclose, then I'd give it a go. Sounds resembling they are going to die otherwise.
How old are they? Very young mums sometimes do reject their babies.
What are you going to do with adjectives the babies anyway? Sell them to the petstore? Keep them? I hate to say it, but possibly if they die, especially the boy ones, it may be for the best.