Dolphins are mammals and as such are warm-blooded and bear live young, which they suckle. |
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The calf will suckle for up to 13 months and may remain with the mother for another 2-3 months after weaning. |
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Sometimes, special dental plates can be used to seal the roof of the mouth to help the baby suckle milk better. |
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Honey suckle edged the white picket fence and roses, swarmed by busy bees filled the gardens with paths of white pebbles. |
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The production of milk comes from suckling on the nipple, and a baby may not suckle frequently enough if it is in a routine. |
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If the calf is too weak to suckle directly, take milk from the cow and feed it using a clean bottle and teat, or by stomach tube. |
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In June, female bats congregate at a maternity roost to give birth and suckle their young. |
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They suckle their calves for eighteen months, carry them on their backs when they are tired and gently guide them along with their flippers. |
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It is best that calves suckle from all 4 teats, but make sure at least 2 teats are suckled. |
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To suckle the young of another species is hardly what Darwinians call an adaptive trait. |
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The cubs are cared for by all the females in the pride, and will suckle from other females as well as from their mother. |
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The joey returns to the pouch to suckle until it is weaned between 8 and 12 months. |
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In terms of hygiene it is best to feed the calf by letting it suckle from the udder. |
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They are not separated from their mothers before being taken from the holding but suckle until natural weaning, and are never fed formula milk. |
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Lambs suckle the ewe and graze extensively outdoors on the abundant natural grass pastures of the farm. |
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A form of inarching used in South East Asia to propagate trees in large numbers is called suckle grafting. |
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There are several reasons that an infant may be poorly attached or not able to suckle effectively. |
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To teach a calf to drink from a bucket it is best to let it suckle on a finger. |
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In a baby, as in the great apes, the larynx is situated high up, allowing it to suckle and breathe simultaneously. |
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Since then most societies have used horns of animals with the tips cut off and covered with parchment, leather, sponges, and cloths for infants to suckle. |
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The fourth type of wet-nursing developed when the Church and the State employed wet nurses to suckle foundlings in institutions created for saving souls and lives. |
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They will tolerate us as long as they can suckle at Uncle Sam's bounteous mammary glands. |
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Colostrum should be bottle fed, even if the calves suckle from the cow, to ensure calves have sufficient immunological protection. |
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Some women are so malnourished that they have no milk to suckle their babies. |
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The dam will instinctively suckle and protect her young, often keeping other dogs and all but the most trusted people away from the whelping box. |
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Method of production: Each producer controls his own flock of sheep, lambs suckle the ewe and graze outdoors on the grass. |
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During the first stage of their lives the lambs are fed exclusively from their mother's milk: they suckle until they are naturally weaned. |
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This can be the case with an older animal who is weakened by disease, or very young animals who don't yet have a suckle reflex. |
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We are now also faced with climate change, and the Greenland seal needs the ice sheet in order to be able to suckle her young. |
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He may cry or try to suckle again, or continue to breastfeed for a long time. |
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If the child does not suckle well and often enough, milk production will adjust itself to an inappropriate level. |
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Female mammary glands are there for lactation, to suckle their young. |
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Milk production of the breed is, however, still more than sufficient to suckle the calf, and several farmers still milk their cows and process milk into typical cheeses. |
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Informal wet-nursing ranges from the occasional nursing of another woman's child to a private arrangement to suckle a baby whose mother is ailing or who has died. |
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Then one watches the gentle firmness with which a herdsman will get a reluctant goat to suckle a kid and realizes how precious these animals are to the Rabari. |
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At one point, they tie the mother camel's legs together so the baby can suckle, but once free she wanders away, her unhappy calf following at a distance behind her. |
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Crias are up and standing, walking and attempting to suckle within the first hour after birth. |
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The majority of peasant farmers in the tropics allow the calf to suckle before milking in order to obtain a let-down of milk. |
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Those benefit bleaters and rampant breeders, who suckle from the State's teat. |
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It is Ma who suggests to Rose of Sharon that she suckle a starving man. |
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Let the calve suckle for a restricted time, 15 to 20 minutes, twice daily and then you continue to milk by hand for collection of milk for home consumption or sale. |
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After hand milking the calf can suckle again. |
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The young are born in a nesting burrow dug by the female, to which she returns once a day for four weeks for them to suckle. |
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However, many babies have a real need to suckle to go to sleep. |
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Articles 136, 149 and 158 of the Personal Status Act provide that mothers shall suckle their children, or, in cases where that is not possible, that the child shall be suckled by another woman for a consideration. |
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Calves suckle their mother up to the age of four or six months. |
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The calves suckle their mothers in the cowshed and in the field. |
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The female rests at the surface with its head held up, and the young suckle upside down. |
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Like horses, zebras are able to stand, walk and suckle shortly after they are born. |
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Lactation proceeds for 19 to 42 months, but calves, rarely, may suckle up to 13 years. |
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They emerge from their setts at eight weeks of age, and begin to be weaned at twelve weeks, though they may still suckle until they are four to five months old. |
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Calves may be allowed to suckle from females other than their mothers. |
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Likewise, calves may suckle for only a month Females become sexually mature when they are four years old, while males become mature at four or five years. |
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