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27 answers

UP TO THREE!!!

2007-09-14 07:41:10 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No never. First one must know that dogs are monouterus animal which makes them unique, the reason they are the only animal that gets locked after mating. .Generally the thumb rule is to get the female dog mated between 8th and 11th day of thier menstrual cycle where the probability of thier getting concieved is higher. So the female dog getting mated by a dog of same breed successfully on the 1st occasion can only get prenanrt and give birth to the same breed. Otherwise if mated with other breed can concive but can only give birth to cross breed, never to two diffrent breeds.

Gallivantbut2.

2007-09-16 08:51:57 · answer #2 · answered by gallivantbut2 1 · 0 1

I know nothing about genetics, but I do know that my neighbor has a Rotti, and she bred her with a male Rotti with a champion blood line. A neighbor on the other side of her had an AKC registered black Standard Poodle. He made a sneaky visit and bred with her Rotti, too.
When the pups were born, they all LOOKED like Rotti's, except 2 had curly fur.
She sold the 5 that didn't have curly hair as pure bred Rotti's, and gave away the 2 curly haired ones. To me, it seems if the dog was bred by 2 different breed males, none of the pups were "Pure" Rottweiler anymore.

2007-09-14 07:25:59 · answer #3 · answered by D J 4 · 0 0

Yes. She can possibly get pregnant by several males. She won't give birth to two different breeds but to definitely different mixed breeds. Unless one of the sires is the same breed as she is.

2007-09-14 07:08:01 · answer #4 · answered by gringo4541 5 · 3 0

Yes, she can get pregnant by two different males and no she can't give birth to two different breeds.

If the mom is a Cocker Spaniel, and one male is Cocker Spaniel, she'd give birth to some purebred Cocker Spaniels. If the other male was a Petit Basset Griffon Vendeen, she'd give birth to some mutts (not to purebred PBGVs).

This is a breeding method used occasionally by people with rare breeds (and fewer puppy buyers). To get more genetic diversity without creating unwanted puppies, they'll breed her to two different males (of the same breed, of course). Then they need to do genetic testing on all puppies and they can register them with AKC.

2007-09-14 07:06:45 · answer #5 · answered by Cleoppa 5 · 5 0

yes it is possible. they are in season for a couple weeks, and can get pregnant any day during that time. although some days are better than others. Please be responsible and keep her away from all male dogs for the complete duration of her season, except for the ONE u want to breed her with. She has many eggs and each one could be fertilized by a different male if you are an irresponsible dog owner who lets her roam.

2007-09-14 07:13:33 · answer #6 · answered by Pam B 1 · 1 1

Well, it would be pretty hard for her to mate with 2 males at the same time, but to answer your question...If she mated with 2 males in a short period of time, then some eggs could be fertilized by one male and some by another.

As to breed, well, they wouldn't be "different" breeds, they would all be mutts....

Sounds like good justification to have her spayed!

2007-09-14 07:10:14 · answer #7 · answered by Yo LO! 6 · 2 0

She can get pregnant by two different males. You really shouldn't do this because it can be dangerous as the babies may be a few days apart in age or different sizes. You'll also have to do genetic testing to see who is the father of who.

2007-09-14 07:09:42 · answer #8 · answered by Madison 6 · 1 0

I've never heard of this happening. I don't see how it can if you learn about how pregnancy takes place. It would be the same thing as a human. A human can't get pregnant by two different men at the same time.

2007-09-14 07:17:31 · answer #9 · answered by Killer Queen 7 · 0 1

Yes, that's why when you see a litter of puppies, they can look very different. Our puppy came from a litter where 4 of the pups appeared to be black labs, and three looked like bloodhounds, yet they all came from the same litter. We asked the woman at the SPCA adoption clinic, and we were told they had two different fathers.

2007-09-14 07:09:48 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Yes they can - which is why if you ever see a breeder that just leaves the females in heat around more than one male - the offspring have to be genetically tested to see which is the father of each puppy.

2007-09-14 07:08:13 · answer #11 · answered by Professional in FL 4 · 2 0

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