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behavior i didn't consider possible.
first off. Hello everyone, and i hope your day so far is well :),
so im in the first week of breeding rats in a seven tub rack system.
i am still in the learning phase with these animals. i got the rats i have now included when i bought the rack.
i had a left over mouse pink from my snakes that had not been eaten so i placed it in my rat tub because i didnt want to kill it myself.
i had figured the rats would eat it honestly. none of the 1.3 rats i had in there have a litter right now. yet one of the females is always next to it. its four days later
and its STILL ALIVE! now i thought cuz it was a mouse they wouldn't want it plus i figured the male would eat it....guys im stumped how is this thing still alive lol?
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Sometime, especially in colonies the rats will adopt each other's young. 1.3 colonies I find, spend a lot of time stealing pinks from each other, and/or working together to raise the babies. If you already have an established colony you may find a female who may have recently had a litter may adopt a different species. If it's still alive and looks relatively healthy you may have successfully fostered by the female you're referring to.
That's my 2 cents, but I hadn't spent a lot of time breeding (8 months before I closed down my breeding project) - And I never had to foster babies, but that's something I remember reading somewhere.
Cheers.
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Registered User
Re: behavior i didn't consider possible.
except this pinky was a mouse pinky and none have had litters in a month....
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First off, that's awesome! Ive heard of rats adopting young of another species, but not first hand accounts Now, I don't want to rain on your parade, but the pink is probably slowly starving to death. Hopefully one of the females drops soon and can feed it, but I wouldn't get my hopes up on long term survival. Just my .02.
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BPnet Veteran
Why would you let it starve? That's a horrible way to die.
1.0 Link, my Abbott Okeetee corn snake
1.0 Pit, my Yellow-belly ball python
1.1 Ramza and Midna, my kittens
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SnowShredder (08-26-2013)
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Re: behavior i didn't consider possible.
 Originally Posted by decensored
you may find a female who may have recently had a litter may adopt a different species.
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Registered User
Re: behavior i didn't consider possible.
My bad there "decensored" lol. ill see if a snake wants it now.i dont want the poor thing to starve.
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The Following User Says Thank You to reptimac For This Useful Post:
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A lady who runs a pet store near me was telling me how rats will adopt hamsters, gerbils and other rodents too.
She puts them with the rat mothers if they get rejected or something happends to their birth mother.
Balls
1.0 Bumblebee Het Ghost
1.0 Power ball
0.1 Fire Ghost
0.1 Butter Pin
Milks
1.0 Eastern milk snake
0.1 Extreme Hypo Honduran
Hognose
0.1 Western hognose Albino
Leopard Gecko
1.0 Sunglow
Beware his song about big butts. He beats you up while he ppppllllaaaaysss iiiit-- Eyugh!
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Mephibosheth1 (08-26-2013)
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Does it have a milk belly still? It's not too common for rats to adopt other species, but it can happen. If it actually did happen, it'll be interesting to see if the rat will continue caring for the baby as it becomes obvious it isn't a rat pup. Rats can be opportunistically predatory, and can/will kill animals smaller than themselves.
Why keep a snake? Why keep any animal? Because you enjoy the animal, find something beautiful and fascinating about it, and it fits seamlessly into your lifestyle.
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Registered User
Re: behavior i didn't consider possible.
 Originally Posted by sorraia
Does it have a milk belly still? It's not too common for rats to adopt other species, but it can happen. If it actually did happen, it'll be interesting to see if the rat will continue caring for the baby as it becomes obvious it isn't a rat pup. Rats can be opportunistically predatory, and can/will kill animals smaller than themselves.
no the adoptive mother isnt producing milk. i fed it off already i didnt want it to starve. however i like that particular rat alot more now lol
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