I've had other hairless litters where the mothers produced milk just fine. It depends on the individual rat. Whether it's a true albino or not I will refer to the REW as albino. Unless you do a lot of genetic nobody really cares about true hairless or true albinos. If it has less hair than my face, I'm calling it hairless. You say albino or hairless they'll look at it and go 'That description works for me' They're just food, after all.
Two pups of the hairless rat's litter were placed with another one of my females who is happily surrogating them. I only downed to 2 because she already has 10 pups of her own and with only 12 nipples I don't want too many pups in with her. The other 2 litters were too different in age. The mothers ignored them. She's a terribly vicious rat and when I tried putting another female in with her she got pretty violent and I had to remove the other female.
This female is lucky, though. My original plans were to feed her off but a friend of mine is really interested in a black eyed hairless/rex female so... She can have it as long as it isn't in my hands anymore. I'm trading for some babies to get more genetic diversity.
I'm pretty happy though because another litter has gotten their hair in and it looks like I've got another litter with a bunch of rex babies.
My current litter log is as follows:
Litter 1: 8 pups 0 lost eyes open
2 cream hooded (1m/1f)
2 black hooded (1m/1f)
1 albino (f)
3 brown hooded (3m)
Litter 2: 10 pups 0 lost eyes open
10 black pups (no genders yet)
Litter 3: 13 pups 4 lost (eaten) eyes open
1 cream hooded
1 cream hooded rex
3 black rex
3 albino
1 white rex
Litter 4: 12 pups 1 lost (stillborn)
3 albino
2 black
4 white rex
1 black hooded
1 offwhite/cream/grey??? (I'm hoping)
So we'll see how these litters go. It looks like I might have 2 others pregnant too. I really want to see if I can manage some cool looking patchworks for pets.
Gosh I need another rack. @_@