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Yes she does.
Animals that regurgitate their food are cows, birds and wolves. Other animals that regurgitate their food are the anaconda and the jackal.
feed their babies
No.
After foraging for food the adults return to the nest and regurgitate the collected food for the young to eat it from their mouths. Not appetizing for a human but it beats starvation.
Regurgitation is a normal act for parrots. It is how they feed their young. Parrots will regurgitate their partially digested food for their chicks.
The adult birds regurgitate partially digested food for their young.
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.
It is called a 'crop' and stores food prior to digestion. Birds that feed their young can regurgitate food from the crop.
When food travels from the stomach back to the mouth, it is called regurgitation.In some animals, this is normally emesis, or vomiting. In ruminants such as cows, it is called chewing the cud. Birds normally regurgitate swallowed food to feed their young.
Whatever food they find from foraging in the forest. Sows will nurse their cubs from the milk from their teats, and teach them what to eat in the forest.
Yes, they do regurgitate their food for many reasons - for example, when feeding their young, to "show off" to potential mates, or to rid their digestive system of undigestible parts of their prey (i.e. the beak from squid).