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​Ultimate caregivers: 5 animals that die after giving birth to their young

etimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 17, 2025, 15:53 IST
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Ultimate caregivers: 5 animals that die after giving birth to their young

Mothers are seen as the most devout creatures, be it as human beings or animals. The magnitude of a mother’s love and contribution to the nourishment and upbringing of the offspring cannot be measured or compared with anything or in any metric units across the world.

But it is quite heartbreaking to know that there are some animals whose miracle of a new life comes at the ultimate cost for their mothers. These creatures pour everything into reproduction, ensuring their offspring get a fighting chance in a tough world.

Found in ocean depths, forests, and rivers, these animal stories are a stark example of evolution's wild strategies, as their lives end right after birth, but their legacy swims, crawls, or flies on.


In these rare and extreme cases, motherhood is shaped by survival rather than longevity. Nature has designed these species in a way where the mother’s role ends the moment new life begins. While it may seem tragic from a human perspective, this sacrifice ensures the continuation of the species, proving that in the wild, life often moves forward through acts of ultimate selflessness.


Here are 5 such animals that die after birth their young

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Octopus

Female octopuses lay thousands of eggs and then stop eating to protect them from predators. They fan the eggs constantly with water to keep them clean and oxygenated, staying stuck to their spot for weeks or months. Once the babies hatch, the exhausted mother starves and dies, her body often eaten by her own young. This process increases the survival rates for the hatchlings in dangerous seas.

This extraordinary sacrifice makes the female octopus one of the most dedicated and selfless caregivers in the animal kingdom.

3/6

Chinook and Sockeye Salmon

Pacific salmon like chinook and sockeye battle upstream for thousands of miles to their birth rivers. Females lay eggs in gravel nests while males fertilize them, using up all their energy in the grueling swim. Their bodies break down quickly—their scales fall off, infections set in, and they die just days after spawning. It's brutal, but this feeds the whole ecosystem. Their nutrient-rich corpses nourish the rivers, boosting insects, plants, and even bears that drag them out. Those leftovers supercharge the water for the new fry, helping the next generation kick off strong.

4/6

Antechinus

Australia's antechinus marsupials see males go into a three-week mating frenzy, copulating up to 14 hours daily. During this mating period, stress hormones flood their systems, suppressing immunity and causing bleeding ulcers. They die right after breeding, just as females give birth and raise tiny joeys. Females often survive one more season but meet the same fate, by giving priority to genes over their longer lives.

5/6

Scorpions

Mother scorpions are total super-moms, giving live birth to dozens of tiny babies that they carry piggyback-style on their backs for weeks to keep them safe from predators and the scorching desert heat. During this time, they barely eat, pouring all their energy into protection, which leaves the older moms super weak and exhausted. Sadly, many die off soon after the little ones are strong enough to scatter and fend for themselves. In some species, like the emperor scorpion, the devoted moms even let their offspring nibble on parts of her body for extra nutrients, a heartbreaking sacrifice that gives the babies a fighting chance in harsh environments. This ultimate parenting gig skyrockets survival rates—up to 80% make it to adulthood thanks to her heroism. It's nature's raw way of saying love means going all in, even if it costs everything. (128 words)

6/6

Spiders

Some spider species, like black widows, lay eggs in silky sacs and guard them fiercely until they hatch. During this crucial incubation period, moms often starve themselves or battle predators to keep the eggs safe. After the spiderlings hatch and balloon away on silk threads, the exhausted mother collapses. In some cases, she even regurgitates food for her babies or offers her own body as their first meal. This ultimate sacrifice gives the little ones a fighting chance to scatter safely and start their own lives in the wild.

Top Comment
P
Princewill Opara
169 days ago
Mothers a blessed and always sacrifice for the next generation. God bless all mothers
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Copyright © Jun 1, 2026, 03.01PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service