Yes. The Hadeda Ibis does mate for life. We have had a pair residing in and around our garden in KwaZulu Natal, South Africa for 10 years now, producing two, and occasionally three chicks every year.
They construct a flimsy nest from sticks and twigs in an avocado tree.
The adults are very tame and we are able to hand feed them meat, chicken, pet food and bread which supplements their own foraging.
The chicks are chased away by the parents around mid June.
Many birds fly and a number mate for life. But no bird is a mammal.
It depends on the kind of bird which died. Love birds usually don't mate with another one. Some birds even commit suicide after their partner dies. Check what kind of bird it is then research on it.
Monogamy is what having only one mate for life is called.
King penguins do not mate for life. They are serially monogamous. They couple with a different mate each year but are monogamous for that season.
Because you never see the Humming Bird with its mate.
yes
Many birds fly and a number mate for life. But no bird is a mammal.
Nene
i think that a flamingo and a bird cant mate
Lots of different penguin and bird species do eg Albatross
Loons are the national bird of canada. they carry their young ontheir back. thet travel with their mate for life
When bird find mate they will build a nest
The frigate bird.
They call out to their mate. Bird's songs are a method of communication.
yes, they mate for life
The simple answer is YES the Australian Magpie is a monogamous bird. Like many bird species they have just the one partner.
Yes flamingos do mate for life.