No.
Yes. Both parents feed the young.
No, they havent got the body parts for it.
* Rooks are also known as Fosdyke Labourers. * They always fly to feed in groups * They go out to feed in groups in the morning and come back late at night. * The only way of telling a blackbird and a rook apart, is that rooks have a small rough bit of skin underneth there beak. * They like to live in conker trees.
what fish feed their own young Both the male and the female Discus fish (Symphysodon discus) produce a nourishing slime on their sides/flanks for their fry to devour.
Nidifugous young have to be fed by a parent, otherwise they'd starve. Both sexes of most passerines, and many other birds, feed their young.
No. Though male alligators would feed on their young ones.
The rooks were the first pieces I learned to use in chess, because their horizontal and vertical movement pattern was so easy to remember. The rooks in England reminded me of the crows at home in Illinois.
They don't feed their young at all.
All animals feed their young.
The Dirty Rooks was created in 2005.
Birds do not feed their young on milk. The lyrebird is a bird, so it does not feed its young milk.