they live in the water
a fish
Clean water, no predators, well aerated, proper temperature (species dependant), shelter.
Drink lots of water, or contact a local Poison Control Center. The child will probably be ok.
Chickens do not feed their young. Chicks are hatched knowing how to eat and drink. Newly hatched chicks do not need food or water for up to 72 hours after they emerge from the shell, they will dry out, fluff up and start to explore their surrounding under the watchful eye of the mother hen. After a day or two they will venture out of the nest and search for food without the mothers help.
If the gosling was hatched naturally, with it's mother, then Yes...it can go straight to the water. However, if you artificially hatched the egg using an incubator, or similar method...then NO. Artificially hatched goslings (and most aquatic fowl) do not have the protection of their mother's oil on them. They are not "water-proof" and will become wet & chilled, as the water will not bead up & roll off of them. Artificially hatched goslings should not be introduced to water until they are no longer "fuzzy". Once you see actual feathers beginning, their own oil gland (located just above the base of the tail) is functioning & they will instinctively use their beaks to spread the oil to other areas of their bodies. This is why birds & water fowl "preen" so often...to distribute these oils.
for a part of their life draonflys live under water. when they are still eggs they will be layed hatched and grow under water then they will grow to the actual dragonfly stage and climb a reed or water plant and dry off its newly formed wings then fly away.
Larva or newly hatched young are tadpoles. Frogspawn then tadpoles
Ducks usually leave the nest just after all the eggs have hatched because the mother bird does not feed the chicks, they have to find food for themselves and to do this best they need to be on water. Thus the mother duck will take them out of the nest and to water immediately.
usually on land.
No, algae do not turn into tadpoles. Tadpoles are the larval stage of frogs and develop from frog eggs, not algae. Algae are photosynthetic organisms that can multiply rapidly in water with sufficient nutrients and sunlight.
Quick sand