Hi Kneesaa. Welcome to the forum!
Normally,
I would be the first to chime in and say NEVER breed a chinchilla you do not have the background on ...
BUT ... in this instance I might consider it. I wish you knew who the male was origionally from and a little about his background ... of course, him living to be about 16 years old ... I would think he comes from some very healthy lines. I don't think he is to old to allow to breed ... because of his health and age. I would probably allow him to father one litter, keep that litter myself, allowing them to grow up and keeping a good watch on them for any health problems, then go from there. I have heard of chinchilla males in their early 20s still in breeding ... maybe that's what keeps them going.
Of course, if the previous owners wanted kits and he did not give them any, that may be the reason they have passed him on to other people. He may not be able to produce. Do you know if the owner you got him from got any kits from him?
You say the female is an ebony ... what color is the male? What do each weigh? These two questions have to be strongly considered before putting two into breeding. I tend to not put the ebonies into breeding until they are about 18 months old. Ebonies tend to be smaller than some of the other colors.
A male chinchilla will often try to breed a female before she is completely in season, if that is the case, she will not give in to him until she is ready and in full season. The females tend to make the males beg quite a bit before they give in.
Is your male doing the "Swish, Swish Tail" dance? If you don't know what that is ... it is a mating ritual. The male shows his eagerness by facing the female and doing a little hop, hop then swish his tail from side to side, then another little hop, hop and swish swish. It is cute as can be and sorta funny. The male even has this "please, please, pretty please" look on his face.
This continues off and on until the female gives in.
I wish I lived somewhere I could have an alpaca ... they are so cute, especially when they are little!
How do your 8 dogs and your cats react toward the chinchillas?
Keep us posted and let us know if anything happens.
Jo Ann