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03-10-05, 12:27 PM
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#1
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Member
Join Date: Aug-2004
Location: South Florida
Posts: 184
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To feed her off or not to feed her off..
Well, to start off with my female rat ate her last litter. I gave her one more chance and this morning i caught her trying to eat her second litter. This time i managed to get 6 pinkies from her and fed them to my snakes. I went back just 5 minutes ago and she dropped two more. These she is not eating but nursing and protecting. What do you think i should do? Feed this female off tonight, and get a new one. Or see if she has changed her ways? Thanks for any help and advise.
-Jason
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03-10-05, 12:50 PM
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#2
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Member
Join Date: Sep-2004
Location: wpg
Age: 41
Posts: 497
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she might be getting used to the strange pink things in her enclosure, and ectually realizing they are hers. If she is doing good with them I would keep her.
good luck
ws
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03-10-05, 01:09 PM
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#3
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Member
Join Date: Mar-2002
Location: Regina, SK
Posts: 2,714
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I would replace her - there are plenty of rats with good maternal behaviour that will raise large litters every time. You gave her one more chance than I would have, especially if she is part of a small breeding group - she is just taking up space if she isn't rearing a lot of babies consistently for you,
mary v.
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Mary VanderKop
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03-10-05, 04:54 PM
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#4
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Banned
Join Date: Aug-2004
Location: United States
Age: 35
Posts: 876
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Rodents first litters may be eaten as its new to them. Though she is finally getting used to the babies and knows they are hers. I would not just "get rid of her" because shes not perfect. She may have ate her second litter due to the fact that she remembers a human ripping her babies from her and murdering them last time, thats why shes aggresive this time more than likley. Im not against feeding rodents to snakes and its a must, but I do think you should at least treat them as a living creature.
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03-10-05, 04:57 PM
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#5
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Member
Join Date: Sep-2003
Location: toronto
Age: 33
Posts: 246
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i would wait and see if she eats her next litter
but thats jus my opinion i could be wrong
thanx froggy
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03-10-05, 04:59 PM
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#6
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Banned
Join Date: Aug-2004
Location: United States
Age: 35
Posts: 876
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I agree, if you would do anything just allow her to take care of her babies, once her babies are a few weeks old she will fend them off, and try to keep them away from her, at this time they are walking and such, you should feed off the babies then if possible. It would be much easier for the mother.
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03-10-05, 05:19 PM
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#7
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Member
Join Date: Jul-2004
Location: Mitchell, Ontario
Age: 37
Posts: 814
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Jason - I would call her a cull. As Mary said, there is no shortage of adequate rats and this one, IMO, doesn't make the grade. I would be hesitant to invest three or four weeks of food, shavings, rack-space and time in a female that may kill her next litter. Also, take into consideration the continuity of your colony; she may have some heritable inclination towards this kind of 'mothering' which is probably not something you would like to proliferate in your breeding stock.
Rikki – I believe Jason wrote that the mother killed the first litter on her own. That in mind, I doubt that “She may have ate her second litter due to the fact that she remembers a human ripping her babies from her and murdering them last time”.
Also, in my experience mother rats do not respond to their young being fed off. In my rack I delegate as many pinkies as I can to my better nurses and limit the pinkies fed by my weaker nurses. I certainly haven’t witnessed any emotional stress on the rats as a consequence of this baby stealing/swapping.
Cam
Last edited by CamHanna; 03-10-05 at 06:52 PM..
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03-10-05, 05:22 PM
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#8
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Banned
Join Date: Aug-2004
Location: United States
Age: 35
Posts: 876
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CamHanna- I stated that rodents often eat their first litter, though the second may have ate them due to stress. Rodents think as humans and other animals, they care for their young which is why they defend them and many often see stress when the babies are taken.
Last edited by Rikki; 03-10-05 at 05:25 PM..
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03-10-05, 05:48 PM
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#9
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Member
Join Date: Oct-2003
Location: Edmonton, AB
Age: 34
Posts: 1,737
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Quote:
Originally posted by Rikki
CamHanna- I stated that rodents often eat their first litter, though the second may have ate them due to stress.
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With mice, any female that ate her litter the first time, and was not bothered also ate the second one and so-on. It isnt something that goes away if they do it again. Though In this case I doubt its from stress as she did it again, and the babies were not "ripped away and murdered".
Quote:
Im not against feeding rodents to snakes and its a must, but I do think you should at least treat them as a living creature.
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How is he not doing that? ALL the feeder's you've used were living creatures.
I say shes had her second chance and feed her off. The babies will be adopted by another mother. As was stated, its not worth the waste of time to see if she does it again.
C.
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Cheers!
Chris
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03-10-05, 05:55 PM
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#10
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Banned
Join Date: Aug-2004
Location: United States
Age: 35
Posts: 876
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I would like to state that this is usually not a continious thing, most mothers will eay their first five litters at times, others not at all. Another mother will not 'adopt' them, the mother would notice the smell of the babies and destroy them. I have no doubt that this person is not taking care of his/her animals, im just saying you shouldnt just toss her away because she ate a litter or two.
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03-10-05, 06:07 PM
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#11
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Member
Join Date: Jul-2004
Location: Mitchell, Ontario
Age: 37
Posts: 814
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"most mothers will eay their first five litters at times". That doesn't make sense; "most... at times" is a contradiction, and I'm curious how you obtained this statistic.
I swap babies ALL THE TIME and have very little cannibalism. I have rat mothers nursing baby mice at this very moment.
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03-10-05, 06:24 PM
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#12
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Banned
Join Date: Aug-2004
Location: United States
Age: 35
Posts: 876
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You should have read it properly
Most new rodent mothers will eat their first few litters, though some do not eat their first littlers.
I have had rodents for some time now and they have always eaten, or tried to eat swaps. You are more than welcome to visit the rodent forums on PetsHub.com many people have discussed it a while back and im sure you can find the topics if you would like. Rodents will often eat their babies if you simply touch them as they do not know the smell and this is the same thing with switching babies... Im tired of arguing with you...
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03-10-05, 06:37 PM
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#13
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Member
Join Date: Mar-2002
Posts: 5,936
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"Most new rodent mothers will eat their first few litters, though some do not eat their first littlers."
Most? I have NEVER had a rat eat a litter. I have NEVER had a rodent eat babies because I touched them. That's a total falsehood. MANY members on this website clean rodent cages the day their rodents give birth, with no ill effects, including me.
Rikki get it straight. We are here to kill and feed rats to our snakes. Yup. Sounds rough put that way but thats what this forum was made for. Discussing breeder rodents marked for snake food. Period. Not culling out a female who eats babies means losing production and losing snake food which means losing money, hobby or not, that counts. Not coming down on you but please stop pushing your PETA-esque thoughts on others who are simply trying to get straight rodents breed for food advice.
As for your female, cull her. Anything that eats babies twice here (never rats for me but mice have) gets put to the snakes because A. Some believe this MIGHT be a trait that can be passed and B. I don't have the time to waste or money feeding mothers who eat young and I always have a hungry snake.
Marisa
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03-10-05, 06:40 PM
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#14
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Member
Join Date: Mar-2002
Posts: 5,936
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BTW I constantly switch babies. I have even put a rat in with a mouse mother. Yup. It's a TOTALLY common practice to have nursing mothers who will accept other rats/mice babies.
Marisa
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03-10-05, 06:41 PM
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#15
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Member
Join Date: Jul-2004
Location: Mitchell, Ontario
Age: 37
Posts: 814
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Quote:
Rikki
most mothers will eay their first five litters at times
CamHanna
That doesn't make sense; "most... at times" is a contradiction
Rikki
You should have read it properly
Most new rodent mothers will eat their first few litters, though some do not eat their first littlers.
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You should have written it properly. Your initial statement and the subsequent rewrite are not synonymous. That aside, this is not a fun debate and I've little more to say; so I suppose I'm tired of 'arguing' with you as well.
Cheers,
Cam
Edit: Marisa gets the big ":thumbsup:" from me.
Last edited by CamHanna; 03-10-05 at 06:47 PM..
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