If by seahawk you mean Osprey...yes, and very well.
no
No SEALS are advanced infantry not pilots.
They can both fly.
In people's imaginations. Penguins cannot fly, but their wings make great flippers to propel them underwater like fish or seals.
In people's imaginations. Penguins cannot fly, but their wings make great flippers to propel them underwater like fish or seals.
Yes, penguins can fly, but they're sneaky, and don't fly in front of us, as they don't get payed for it, they are in fact very intelligent, rivalling even dolphins, mice, seals, and that bunch of idiots we humans call humans.
wendell seals are seals in the Antarctic wendell seals are seals in the Antarctic wendell seals are seals in the Antarctic wendell seals are seals in the Antarctic
Harbor seals, Elephant seals, Ross seals, Weddell seals, Antarctica Fur seals, Leopard seals and Navy seals.
7: elephant seals,harp seals, cabeater seals, ross seals, leopard seals, wendell seals and hooded seals
Various sources give seals a range of collective names: bob of seals colony of seals crash of seals flock of seals harem of seals herd of seals plump of seals pod of seals rookery of seals spring of seals team of seals
Yes! they prey on young Antarctic Fur seals, Crabeater Seals, Ross Seals And Weddell Seals
Various sources give seals a range of collective names: bob of seals colony of seals crash of seals flock of seals harem of seals herd of seals plump of seals pod of seals rookery of seals spring of seals team of seals most common: herd, pod, colony, or rookery less common: bob or harem