Inb4 "plumpie" becomes a bouncy castle, or a balloon, or another absurd object like a vacuum cleaner(ok, that one wasn't kobi, but it easily could have been).
Apple said: Ooooh, oooh, I know a thing! I know a thing! *bounces up and down with her eagerness to infodump random animal trivia*
Bunnies can actually carry two litters at a time due to having bicornate duplex uteri—which means that they have two uterine horns/lobes. Carrying multiple litters at once can be risky for one or both of those litters, and even for the mother. Buuuut the point is that, depending on how you want to handle bunny girl physiology, they could feasibly 'get to work on making the second litter' then and there.
Additionally, most litter-bearing animals, including rabbits iirc, can have litters sired by multiple fathers. I foster cats for a no-kill animal rescue (hence why I know all of these weird animal facts, aside from being a librarian and therefore a research addict), and we see litters all the time where half of the kittens look look nothing like their mom or each other (we rarely get to see the father(s), even when the litters and mothers are surrendered in-person)... just sayin' that your dom might want to take a good look at those triplets if he wasn't expecting a litter, is all. ;3
That's actually really interesting! I'll keep that in mind the next time I make a bunny girl caption!
Apple said: Ooooh, oooh, I know a thing! I know a thing! *bounces up and down with her eagerness to infodump random animal trivia*
Bunnies can actually carry two litters at a time due to having bicornate duplex uteri—which means that they have two uterine horns/lobes. Carrying multiple litters at once can be risky for one or both of those litters, and even for the mother. Buuuut the point is that, depending on how you want to handle bunny girl physiology, they could feasibly 'get to work on making the second litter' then and there.
Additionally, most litter-bearing animals, including rabbits iirc, can have litters sired by multiple fathers. I foster cats for a no-kill animal rescue (hence why I know all of these weird animal facts, aside from being a librarian and therefore a research addict), and we see litters all the time where half of the kittens look look nothing like their mom or each other (we rarely get to see the father(s), even when the litters and mothers are surrendered in-person)... just sayin' that your dom might want to take a good look at those triplets if he wasn't expecting a litter, is all. ;3
Neat! I like knowing weird & interesting facts like those.
Ooooh, oooh, I know a thing! I know a thing! *bounces up and down with her eagerness to infodump random animal trivia*
Bunnies can actually carry two litters at a time due to having bicornate duplex uteri—which means that they have two uterine horns/lobes. Carrying multiple litters at once can be risky for one or both of those litters, and even for the mother. Buuuut the point is that, depending on how you want to handle bunny girl physiology, they could feasibly 'get to work on making the second litter' then and there.
Additionally, most litter-bearing animals, including rabbits iirc, can have litters sired by multiple fathers. I foster cats for a no-kill animal rescue (hence why I know all of these weird animal facts, aside from being a librarian and therefore a research addict), and we see litters all the time where half of the kittens look look nothing like their mom or each other (we rarely get to see the father(s), even when the litters and mothers are surrendered in-person)... just sayin' that your dom might want to take a good look at those triplets if he wasn't expecting a litter, is all. ;3
Bibla499
2017-01-18 21:00:13>> #151205
JoyJoyBoy
2017-01-18 20:50:45>> #151203
We do.
Pinkanator
2017-01-18 16:41:16>> #151181
das some gud unf
yoooooooooooooooooooooo
mariosonicfan
2017-01-18 15:30:54>> #151178
Daytonlion
2017-01-28 19:28:10>> #153089
HypnotizedUnicorns
2017-01-18 13:09:29>> #151169
MindMasher
2017-01-18 12:48:14>> #151168
DouDile
2020-02-17 01:24:47>> #356294
DouDile
2017-01-18 11:45:43>> #151166
DouDile
2017-01-19 04:07:47>> #151285
She probably will
Wait...it's a woman? this world is awesome.
BlueAngel
2017-01-19 03:38:37>> #151280
Stepford gonna like this.
And...the 2nd part of Elegance.
She probably will
DouDile
2017-01-19 01:14:32>> #151262
X3 "Meh"
It's Gardin Time.
HypnoHarley
2017-01-18 14:09:40>> #151174
DouDile
2017-01-18 11:34:09>> #151164
And...the 2nd part of Elegance.
Psi
2017-01-18 10:05:13>> #151151
Fire_Psycho
2017-01-18 23:16:56>> #151233
Seems like kobi is going through a self-destructive behavior. =/
“HIIIIIGHWAY TO HELL!“
Mimikyu
2017-01-18 17:13:33>> #151188
Blade_Dragonwolf
2017-01-18 10:12:51>> #151152
DouDile
2017-01-18 09:46:07>> #151147
In the mouth.
pokemongirl
2017-01-18 21:40:08>> #151210
shantae has nips edition
*giggles* best edition
zeldacia3
2017-01-18 21:18:26>> #151206
Abe_Smith
2017-01-18 20:26:24>> #151199
mariosonicfan
2017-01-18 14:43:02>> #151176
Bokasa
2017-01-18 10:02:37>> #151150
NotFromOz
2017-02-03 00:04:34>> #154068
Defcon7
2017-01-19 02:08:02>> #151271
She can PING me any day @.@
She can do a hell of a lot more to meee @w@
Ping me also!! @u@
SeaithDaizon
2017-01-18 21:43:50>> #151212
Pinkanator
2017-01-18 21:40:16>> #151211
She can PING me any day @.@
She can do a hell of a lot more to meee @w@
pokemongirl
2017-01-18 21:38:52>> #151209
Pazuzu
2017-01-18 20:24:21>> #151198
aliensdideverything
2017-01-18 08:14:34>> #151134
Zelinko
2017-01-18 13:59:17>> #151172
That's actually really interesting! I'll keep that in mind the next time I make a bunny girl caption!
How do you think they reproduce that fast?!
doctorpluto
2017-01-18 13:40:12>> #151170
Ooooh, oooh, I know a thing! I know a thing! *bounces up and down with her eagerness to infodump random animal trivia*
Bunnies can actually carry two litters at a time due to having bicornate duplex uteri—which means that they have two uterine horns/lobes. Carrying multiple litters at once can be risky for one or both of those litters, and even for the mother. Buuuut the point is that, depending on how you want to handle bunny girl physiology, they could feasibly 'get to work on making the second litter' then and there.
Additionally, most litter-bearing animals, including rabbits iirc, can have litters sired by multiple fathers. I foster cats for a no-kill animal rescue (hence why I know all of these weird animal facts, aside from being a librarian and therefore a research addict), and we see litters all the time where half of the kittens look look nothing like their mom or each other (we rarely get to see the father(s), even when the litters and mothers are surrendered in-person)... just sayin' that your dom might want to take a good look at those triplets if he wasn't expecting a litter, is all. ;3
That's actually really interesting! I'll keep that in mind the next time I make a bunny girl caption!
Vanilla-Lover
2017-01-18 07:58:41>> #151130
Ooooh, oooh, I know a thing! I know a thing! *bounces up and down with her eagerness to infodump random animal trivia*
Bunnies can actually carry two litters at a time due to having bicornate duplex uteri—which means that they have two uterine horns/lobes. Carrying multiple litters at once can be risky for one or both of those litters, and even for the mother. Buuuut the point is that, depending on how you want to handle bunny girl physiology, they could feasibly 'get to work on making the second litter' then and there.
Additionally, most litter-bearing animals, including rabbits iirc, can have litters sired by multiple fathers. I foster cats for a no-kill animal rescue (hence why I know all of these weird animal facts, aside from being a librarian and therefore a research addict), and we see litters all the time where half of the kittens look look nothing like their mom or each other (we rarely get to see the father(s), even when the litters and mothers are surrendered in-person)... just sayin' that your dom might want to take a good look at those triplets if he wasn't expecting a litter, is all. ;3
Neat! I like knowing weird & interesting facts like those.
Apple
2017-01-18 06:39:02>> #151124
Bunnies can actually carry two litters at a time due to having bicornate duplex uteri—which means that they have two uterine horns/lobes. Carrying multiple litters at once can be risky for one or both of those litters, and even for the mother. Buuuut the point is that, depending on how you want to handle bunny girl physiology, they could feasibly 'get to work on making the second litter' then and there.
Additionally, most litter-bearing animals, including rabbits iirc, can have litters sired by multiple fathers. I foster cats for a no-kill animal rescue (hence why I know all of these weird animal facts, aside from being a librarian and therefore a research addict), and we see litters all the time where half of the kittens look look nothing like their mom or each other (we rarely get to see the father(s), even when the litters and mothers are surrendered in-person)... just sayin' that your dom might want to take a good look at those triplets if he wasn't expecting a litter, is all. ;3