No. Bats and some insects can fly, and neither are not considered birds.
It is not only birds that fly. Bats fly and they are not birds.
Birds and bats are the only animals that truly fly. A few others can glide, but not fly.
Apart from birds, the only animals native to Australia which can fly at all are any of the 80 or so species of bats.Gliders cannot fly, but can only glide.
The only animals capable of true flight are birds, bats, and insects.
Lots of birds can fly, birds such as eagles, vultures, cardinals, blue birds, magpies, flamingos, toucans, geese, ducks, parrots, crows, etc. There are only a few birds that cannot fly, such as the ostrich, kiwi and penguin. Some insects such as butterflies, beetles and wasps can fly. The only mammal that can fly are bats. Flying squirrels only glide and flying fish only jump very high.
An aerial animal is any creature that spends time in the air, typically in flight. There are several animals like flying squirrels and flying lizards that can glide, but dont truly fly. The only flying mammals are bats, most birds can fly and almost 90% of insects can fly.
The most obvious answer is that birds can fly.
Normally birds are easily recognizable because they have wings and fly. However, there are some birds which don't fly and some animals that do fly even though they are not birds. Birds that don't fly include ostrich, emu, cassowary and penguin. Animals that fly include bats and flying foxes.
Yes birds, bats, and many insects can fly.
Bats and most birds.
Some of them do. Such as birds and bats and annoying bugs.
You call animals that fly in the air aerial locomotion animals. Such animals include most birds, bats and certain insects.