kat
Member
Worry that males not neutered are more aggressive than females ? I already have four males that have previously been neutered. Any advice would be appreciated.
Are they all kept together?
If so, that's a bad idea to begin with. Males rarely work together, especially when a female is present. I would recommend getting all of them spayed/neutered if possible so the males don't fight and the female doesn't get cancer.
.Am I understanding correctly? You have 4 neutered males. In addition you have 4 sibling rabbits all intact -- 1 female, 3 males.
Where are the neutered 4 males currently kept? Do they live together? Bonded?
What are you hoping to do with the young siblings? Bond them all together? With the 4 already-neutered males?
If you wanted to bond your female with one of the males, it would be advised to spay her and neuter him. Having multiple males bond together is difficult. If a female is present, it is even more difficult.
If the older 4 are bonded now, that could break with the presence of the new rabbits.
Groupings of rabbits are difficult to achieve. Rabbits more easily bond in pairs, but even having a bonded pair near other pairs can be difficult.
Males can still have viable sperm until up to 4 weeks after neuters and should be kept away from females for 6-8 weeks to be sure hormones are gone.
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Yes that is what I have now in a fenced farm.
Oh thank you. My friend lives in an apartment and her rabbit had 8 bunnies. I helped her by taking 4. They are 4 months old now and do live together but noticing scraps starting . Vet had sexed them but too young and wasn’t accurate. So here I am . Separated female and next week she will be fixed and then will have each male fixed. How long do I separate her from males after operation to heal ? And do the males have to be separated after fixing? Thanks
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