No, traditionally vampires don't engage in sex as humans experience it and cannot reproduce that way. They 'reproduce' when they make another vampire, and have relationships of a special nature with their 'offspring' that are different from their relationships with other vampires.
In Balkans folklore, a dhampir (Albanian pronunciation: [ðamˈpir]) is a mythical creature that is the result of a union between a vampire and a human. This union was usually between male vampires and female humans, with stories of female vampires mating with male humans being rare.
In the world of Twilight, vampire women are unable to get pregnant because their body can not change to hold a fetus. But men are apparently able to get human women pregnant.
Abstract. A vampire is a non-dead and non-alive chimerical creature, which, according to various folklores and popular superstitions, feeds on blood of the living to draw vital force. Vampires do not reproduce by copulation, but by bite.
In most vampire lore, if it's possible for humans to mate with vampires, then it's a mixture of both. The hybrid is often called a “dhampir.” A good example of a dhampir is Adrian “Alucard” Fahrenheit Tepes from Castlevania. He is the son of Dracula and a human named Lisa.
Vampires are drawn to their mates through a combination of affinity and chemical compatibility. The bond between mates is irresistible and lasts for a lifetime.
Bella gets pregnant after one night of passionate sex with her husband Edward the vampire, sex that leads to the destruction of their idyllic honeymoon suite.
Noun. vampiress (plural vampiresses) A female vampire.
Bella gets pregnant with Edward's child during their honey moon on Isle Esme. Her pregnancy is killing her because the child is half human, half vampire, and it's diet is very much like it's father's. It needs blood to survive, not baby food or human food.
Tick. Ticks are some of the most prolific vampires on Earth, capable of drinking up to 600 times their body weight in blood thanks to a stretchable outer shell.
Vampires have blood, which is what's used to fill those erections generally required for sex, in their system only after they've hunted and sucked their victims dry.
The venom, Stephenie writes, is what helps Edward impregnate Bella in the fictional book.
Sperm are living cells. Edward is dead - his cells have been burned and crystallized by venom, as described by Stephenie Meyer herself. Therefore his sex cells (sperm) are also dead.
Newborn or newborn vampire is the term for a vampire that has been transformed for less than one year.
Vampires also never age once they hit Young Adulthood unless you force them to age up. Ergo, vampires will never die of old age. However, vampires are not completely immortal. They can still die from downing, fires, electrocution, or other accidents.
It depends on the lore. In most vampire lore vampires are infertile and so could not have a baby at all. In other versions only the female is sterile, and the male is able to produce children with a human. Generally these children are hybrids and not true vampires.
Edward is reluctant to change Bella into a vampire, believing that becoming a vampire will destroy her soul. Bella agrees to marry Edward on the condition that he will make love to her while she is still human and then turn her into a vampire.
When she gives birth, Edward rips open Bella's stomach with his teeth to get the baby out. It's a bloody and gruesome birth.
Jacob is further stunned when Edward suggested that Jacob be the one to give Bella what she wants in the form of a baby. He explained how he wanted Jacob to help him convince Bella to abort the baby so that she can eventually become pregnant with Jacob's baby.
Real vampires, on the other hand, believe that their physical, mental, and emotional health will deteriorate if they don't feed—either on blood or on energy. There are three types of real vampires: sanguinarian, psychic, and hybrids. Sanguinarians feed on very small amounts of human blood, generally just a few drops.
A queen vampire is comparable to a queen bee; she does not venture from her hive, and is the creator of all the vampires within it. If a queen perishes, most likely her hive with die along with her. In dire circumstances, a queen may choose to "swarm" and leaves her hive with her brood of vampires.
The Volturi reach Forks intent on killing Renesmee and the Cullens. However, the Cullen family members gather witnesses from around the world to prove that Renesmee is not an immortal child.
In bella swan's case the baby was a vampire and it was growing rapidly. So, it needed a lot of nutrition to keep up with that pace. Bella's body was not able to provide nutrition to both the mother and the baby that's why it deteriorated quickly.
In the movie, as in the book, Bella finds herself unexpectedly and terrifyingly pregnant with a rapidly-growing fetus that does her great harm — starving her, kicking her bruised, breaking her ribs and ultimately her spine.