When they are within the colony, bees communicate by 'drumming' on the wax walls in the colony. They also do a 'waggle dance' which indicates the direction and distance of a source of nectar or pollen that they have found.
Monarch butterflies communicate with scents and colors. The males attract females to mate by releasing chemicals from scent glands on the hind wings. All monarchs signal that they are poisonous by having bright orange wings. The bright colors serve as a warning that predators should attack at their own risk.
I'm pretty sure That butterflies communicate with each other by clicking noising that the make and by color patterns.
Birds talk to each other because they have a beak like a human has a mouth & they make chirp chirp sounds that come from their birdophram like we have a diophram:)
by chirping
They dance
no Yes, but not with speech. For example, honey bees do an elaborate dance to communicate where the best flowers for pollen are located to their hivemates.
Bugs can communicate with each other, but they can not talk to humans.
No, but they can use body language to communicate to each other.
They communicate with each other by sharing their ideas and maybe talk about their experiments together or writing to each other
they wrote letters to each other. And they would talk to each other.
they cant talk but they can communicate with each other like dolphins
well its just like diffferent cultures its a fifferent langugage but if you notice almost every beee makes a sound but thats from its wings but thats how they communicate
the same way how humans communicate each other.... dolphins also communicate
YES! pandas communicate with each other by scratching on trees
they give squeaks They Give the same sounds to each other to communicate that they give to you.
They made languages so that people can communicate and talk to each other
Cuneiform was a writing system used by ancient Mesopotamian civilizations, such as the Sumerians, Babylonians, and Assyrians, to record various aspects of their society, including administrative documents, laws, religious texts, and literature. It was one of the earliest known writing systems, characterized by wedge-shaped symbols impressed into clay tablets.