No. When a kookaburra utters its distinctive laugh, and another kookaburra then replies, this is not copying. Each bird is letting the other known where its territory is. The kookaburra's distinctive laugh is to mark its territory.
You need to make use of the copy function to copy the files that are not next to each other.
They both copy each other.
A Kookaburra is a species of bird. It has a call roughly similar to a person laughing raucously. The kookaburra's laugh is mainly a territorial call and a way of communicating with other kookaburras.
Collective nouns for kookaburras are a flock or a riot of kookaburras.
They don't. Kookaburras can be heard at any time of day. The kookaburra's laugh is a territorial call and a warning, or just a communication, to other kookaburras. Such reinforce.ment of the kookaburra's territory occurs whenever there may be a perceived threat.
No. There are no kookaburras in South Africa. Kookaburras are native to Australia and the island of New Guinea.
Kookaburras are not an omen of anything.
kookaburras are famous because of their laugh
The question is purely academic. If there were no grass, there would not be other species. Kookaburras feed on snakes and lizards, which in turn, feed on smaller creatures that may hide in grass. If the kookaburras' food source died out, there would be no kookaburras ... But if it died out due to lack of grass, most animal life would have died out anyway.
Kookaburras lives in trees on the branches.
No. Kookaburras are neither poisonous nor venomous.
Calgary Kookaburras was created in 2007.