|
|
|
|
|
by Dylan16807
2640 days ago
|
|
So let's examine a setup with three cages, with two parent mice having a litter of 6 every 45 days. So every 45 days we have a new batch of 90-day-old mice, and they cost $135 or $23 each. Add a couple more dollars to sustain the ancestor mice, add enough inefficiencies to double the cost, that's still only $50 per mouse. Rearing costs aren't even going to hit 1% of $17000. |
|
So, let's say you need 20 female mice for an experiment (e.g. 4 groups of 5). That means that you need to have >40 offspring in order to get enough female offspring. That's at least 7 breeding pairs (assuming you're not harem breeding) and you've got to maintain them for 6-8 weeks until you can use them. That's >$1,000 in breeding costs before you get to the actual experiments.