No. Kookaburras are diurnal, that is, active during the day.
Kookaburras are diurnal. They use the daytime hours to hunt for food and to protect their territory.
search for food
Owls have large eyes that help them search for food at night.
Not necessarily. Kookaburras will, of course, be present as long as there is a food source, but they are just as likely to be around because of lizards. When the raucous call of kookaburras is heard, it is not an indication of snakes being around, but rather just the kookaburras staking their territorial claims.
Grasshoppers and kookaburras are both members of the Kingdom Animalia. They also both breathe air, have wings (although not all species of grasshopper have wings), and require food in order to survive. They also often occupy the same food web as, among other things, kookaburras will eat grasshoppers.
Collective nouns for kookaburras are a flock or a riot of kookaburras.
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.
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
Kookaburras lives in trees on the branches.
No. Kookaburras are neither poisonous nor venomous.