No, they can all fly. Peacocks exspecially, they can fly strait up atleast 50 ft!
Not at all. Ducks most certainly fly, even being migratory birds in some parts of the world.
Ducks are not flightless. In some places, ducks are migratory birds, flying long distances in winter.
Chickens, ducks, geese, guinea fowl, peacocks, emu
These days, mostly chickens, ducks, geese and turkeys. Pigeons are kosher, as are many songbirds. Birds of prey and scavengers are explicitly forbidden, as are flightless birds.
Chickens, geese, ducks, peacocks, and turkeys are common birds on farms. There is also a variety of wild birds that might live around farms.
Horses and cows: both are farm animals, chickens and ducks: both are flightless birds.
its a steamer duck, steamer ducks are a genus (Tachyeres) of ducks in the family Anatidae. All of the four species occur in South Americaspecially in the falk islands
no peacocks are solitary birds and most the time dont get along with other birds :p
Swimming flightless birds are penguins. Diving birds include dippers, auks, gannets, and boobies. Diving waterfowl include ducks, grebes, loons, cormorants, and shags. Shallow-diving sea birds include the pelican and albatross.
J. Gregory Brown has written: 'Baldwin's secret' -- subject(s): Ducks, Fiction, Flightless birds, Foxes, Secrets
Some birds that build their nests on the ground are flightless birds, such as emus and ostriches, but other birds which can fly are also ground-nesting. These birds include chickens, penguins, killdeer (a kind of plover), and water birds such as ducks, geese, swans etc.
Like the majority of Australian native mammals, the wombat is a marsupial.