An emu's bones are solid and adapted for long periods of running and walking. A seagull's bones are light and hollow so they can fly easily.
Well, darling, emus are big birds with strong, weight-bearing bones to support their hefty bodies, while seagulls are more lightweight and have hollow bones to help them stay afloat. So, in a nutshell, emus have sturdier bones for strutting around the outback, while seagulls have lighter bones for soaring gracefully over the ocean. Hope that clears things up for you, sugar!
An emu's bones are solid and adapted for long periods of running and walking. A seagull's bones are light and hollow so they can fly easily.
An emu's bones are solid and adapted for long periods of running and walking. A seagull's bones are light and hollow so they can fly easily.
Of course. They are vertebrates, meaning they have an internal skeleton.
Yes, and I have the pictures and 8" scar to prove it.
A splanchnic bone is a bone that develops in soft tissue and is unattached to the rest of the skeleton. Ex. In cats and dogs: Os penis (a bone in the penis) In cattle: Os cordis (a bone in the heart)
Kiwis, emus and cassowaries, together with rheas and ostriches, are flightless birds, or ratites. Ratites have wings but the bones in their chests do not have the capacity for flight muscles, which is what a bird needs to fly.
The collective nouns for emus are a mob of emus or an implausibility of emus.
No. Although both emus and ostriches are ratites,flightless birds having certain similar characteristics, they are from different parts of the world. Emus are native to Australia and ostriches are native to Africa.
Male emus are only referred to as male emus and female emus as female emus.
emus
Emus do not have pouches. They are birds.