they live in like shallow rivers or ponds that are shallow around the edge cus i liv near a pond and there is a 3 ft stork that lives there but it only stays in the morning and then it leaves and then it comes back at the end of the day and there is 2 duks that live there too but used to be three until one of the duks went missing and then a girl duck had 8 ducklings and then they disapeared and then the 2 ducks i told u about went missing then the stork came then the 2 ducks came back ( I believe there's a ducknapper on the loose cus they stole my very own white duck from the pond) i let my little white duck go to the pond and he wanted to stay for a while and he cant fly he is a domestic duck who cant fly and i let him swim with the other ducks so i left him there and id come back to feed him bread and one day he is just gone
in your face
Yes, they have webbed feet and spend a lot of time wading and standing in water.
A mallard is not a wading bird, like a heron or stork. A mallard is a duck and considered to be a waterfowl.
Egret is a long-legged, wading bird. It is related to a heron.
yes it is A wading bird is not necessarily a migratory bird. Many wading birds in sub tropical and tropical climates do not migrate. Those living in colder regions, where the surface water of lakes, ponds, and rivers may freeze in the winter, do migrate.
There are many African wading birds. It could be an Ibis or an Egret.
egret
a loon
Crane.
avocet
Rail.
avocet