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Ways to rotate mice...NEED HELP!
I have a 18tub rack and I am going to run a 1.2 in 9 of the tubs and use the other 9 as birthing tubs for prego females. I want my females to have a one week break in between nursing the pups and starting to breed again. I have a genral idea of how I will rotate them though the breeder tubs (1st 9tubs) and the birthing tubs (other 9tubs) but, I have been trying to put this on paper and my my brain just wont let me do it. I've been going crazy for the past 2 days trying to do so:rage:
I was wondering if anyone would lay it down for me so I could see it:please:
I would really really really apperciate it:D
Thanx a lot and sorry if this is a bit wordie.
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If you have any suggstions on how I should do it or ho you do it that would be great:)
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Me too I would like to know.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Why rotate mice? they do best in colonies, and left alone.
Just leave them all together, find a combination that works for the particular bin. Some may be 1.3, some may be 1.8, others may even be 2.5, etc etc...
Find a group of mice that work well together, and let them populate.
I have some bins that are literally 3.15 with dozens of babies. Take out a male or a few females, and they start in with the cannibalism... It's a fine line with some, and doesn't matter what you do with others...
I harvest about 400-600 mice a week in 60 lab cage colonies.
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I ment like when you have them set up in a rack set up.
Thats pretty wierd how you have sometimes 2 males. Ppl usually dont promote that because sometimes the males will fight and injury themselfs/kill. Also they might eat thier babys...
How do you run a 2.15 in those little lab cages? Thats about 150 pinks in that size cage?
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Re: Ways to rotate mice...NEED HELP!
Quote:
Originally Posted by jasbus
Why rotate mice? they do best in colonies, and left alone.
Just leave them all together, find a combination that works for the particular bin. Some may be 1.3, some may be 1.8, others may even be 2.5, etc etc...
Find a group of mice that work well together, and let them populate.
I have some bins that are literally 3.15 with dozens of babies. Take out a male or a few females, and they start in with the cannibalism... It's a fine line with some, and doesn't matter what you do with others...
I harvest about 400-600 mice a week in 60 lab cage colonies.
Holy SNIKES! That's a LOT of mice!
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Like I said, every cage has it's own dynamic structure.
Yeah, at times, a couple of my cages can look like a horror film full of mice.
Males are generally just one per cage, but at times, a baby may get left in and grow up. Most of the time, the skirmishes are with newly introduced females.
As for a rotating rack, I'd still just run a small colony in each bin, and be done with it. Pull the weaners out on a regular basis, and they should be fine.
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Re: Ways to rotate mice...NEED HELP!
Quote:
Originally Posted by jasbus
Like I said, every cage has it's own dynamic structure.
Yeah, at times, a couple of my cages can look like a horror film full of mice.
Males are generally just one per cage, but at times, a baby may get left in and grow up. Most of the time, the skirmishes are with newly introduced females.
As for a rotating rack, I'd still just run a small colony in each bin, and be done with it. Pull the weaners out on a regular basis, and they should be fine.
:bow::bow::bow:
introduction of new mice MANY times results in death.
Setup up a colony and let them be.
I personally recommend you only pull weaners when you are cleaning. It changes the scent and environment and causes little problems. Just pulling weaners has shown me a reluctance of reproduction or a tendency for mothers to kill their offspring.
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