Yes, moorhens are very able swimmers, much like the coot, and are often found around water. They also feed on water plants.
Nope.
because it is the moles habitat.
Unlike another familiar subterranean dwelling mammal, the gopher, moles are not rodents. They are more closely related to shrews and belong to the newer order Soricomorpha. They were previously classified under the now discarded order Insectivora. Moles are predators. They feed on earthworms, insect larva and adult insects as well as other invertebrates. Some moles swim in shallow creeks and riverbeds in search of prey.
Unlike another familiar subterranean dwelling mammal, the gopher, moles are not rodents. They are more closely related to shrews and belong to the newer order Soricomorpha. They were previously classified under the now discarded order Insectivora. Moles are predators. They feed on earthworms, insect larva and adult insects as well as other invertebrates. Some moles swim in shallow creeks and riverbeds in search of prey.
a moles (b moles/a moles) = b moles
crabs Moles plants fishes rabbits, voles, spiders, grasshoppers, ground eggs, crabapples, birds, groundhogs, mice, rats, jellyfishes, bird eggs, squirrels, salamanders, frogs, chipmunks, grills, snails and earwings
2 moles of Ca and 4 moles of OH
3.3 moles of K2S 3.3 moles of S-2 6.6 moles of K+1
Of course 6 moles.
there are 4.5 moles
3,7 moles of C8H11NO2 have 3,7 moles of oxygen (O2).
2.5 moles H2O (2 moles H/1 mole H2O) = 5 moles of hydrogen
The collective nouns for moles are:a company of molesa labour of moles (or labor)a movement of moles