Maternal instinct: Moving images showing mother animals carrying their young in their mouths. Love is all they need.
Cats, squirrels, rodents, and some other mammals carry newborns by grasping skin at the nape of their necks in their mouths. While being carried, the young become passive and assume a compact posture, with hind legs drawn to the body.
A human mother rocking a baby in her arms and a cat carrying her kitten by the scruff of its neck have the same physiological effect on both young animals and probably stem from the same maternal instinct to protect their young.
Animals carry their young in their mouths when they are newborns to move them from place to place, and to protect them because they are fragile.
They soon stop because the baby needs to grow on its own and learn to thrive for itself.
Cats, squirrels, rodents, and some other mammals carry newborns by grasping skin at the nape of their necks in their mouths. While being carried, the young become passive and assume a compact posture, with hind legs drawn to the body.
A human mother rocking a baby in her arms and a cat carrying her kitten by the scruff of its neck have the same physiological effect on both young animals and probably stem from the same maternal instinct to protect their young.
Animals carry their young in their mouths when they are newborns to move them from place to place, and to protect them because they are fragile.
They soon stop because the baby needs to grow on its own and learn to thrive for itself.
Wonderful! A great collection. Never seen a baby hyena before!