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update
hi, so i weighted the rats and the male is at 308g and the females are 275g and 278g but nothing yet. i'm wondering if the male is not doing his job or i'm just unpatient?
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BPnet Veteran
Re: update
 Originally Posted by jben
hi, so i weighted the rats and the male is at 308g and the females are 275g and 278g but nothing yet. i'm wondering if the male is not doing his job or i'm just unpatient?
you're impatient...
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The Following User Says Thank You to suzuki4life For This Useful Post:
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Registered User
Re: update
 Originally Posted by suzuki4life
you're impatient... 
...or your rat is impotent
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The Following User Says Thank You to mr. s For This Useful Post:
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Re: update
How long have they been together? Sometimes it just takes a few weeks and the females won't really start showing until their 2nd week of pregnancy.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Jay_Bunny For This Useful Post:
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Re: update
Suzuki, thats exactly what i was thinking...LOL.
Mr.S, that was my second thought but i did not want to jump to conclusions...LOL or maybe not for him...LOL
Jay-Bunny, they have been together since 3/7 but they were alot smaller, i bought them as small rats.
Last edited by jben; 03-29-2010 at 01:24 PM.
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Re: update
It is very possible that you are just being a little too impatient. However, it is not uncommon to have a male that just doesn't get the job done, or he'll get a few females pregnant here and there, but not nearly as fast & as often as you want.
I haven't really made a scientific study of this, but it seems with my mice, when I let a male grow up with females (like when I want to breed him back to his mother, so I never take him away from her), he takes a while to get started breeding. On the other hand, when he is separated from females for a short while when he is weaned, then put in a colony at around 4 or 5 weeks of age, he'll start breeding right away.
Maybe it would jump-start your male if you separated him from the girls for a while?
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The Following User Says Thank You to kc261 For This Useful Post:
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BPnet Veteran
Re: update
 Originally Posted by kc261
It is very possible that you are just being a little too impatient. However, it is not uncommon to have a male that just doesn't get the job done, or he'll get a few females pregnant here and there, but not nearly as fast & as often as you want.
I haven't really made a scientific study of this, but it seems with my mice, when I let a male grow up with females (like when I want to breed him back to his mother, so I never take him away from her), he takes a while to get started breeding. On the other hand, when he is separated from females for a short while when he is weaned, then put in a colony at around 4 or 5 weeks of age, he'll start breeding right away.
Maybe it would jump-start your male if you separated him from the girls for a while?
the reason your mouse isn't breeding with its own mother is because it is not weaning itself...once you remove it and place it back, it is totally weaned and taking its place in the social order. While it views its mother as mom....it will be focused on potential food, not breeding.
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The Following User Says Thank You to suzuki4life For This Useful Post:
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Re: update
suzuki do you think taking the male out for a week will jump start him?
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BPnet Veteran
Re: update
 Originally Posted by jben
suzuki do you think taking the male out for a week will jump start him?
I wouldn't bother....
patience....
I have an extra 200-400 this week if you really have the need for rats...

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Re: update
ok, ok, i'll wait, it's just killing me but thanks for the offer but right now the adults are not eating and i still have f/t left. thanks
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