Tarsiers are very timid so it is very hard for them to find a mate/partner. Tarsiers meet up in the day to sleep that is were they find a mate/partner. I am not very sure but by looking at a tarsiers it would look like if it gives birth like a human.
(this is what i think)
My opinion
Kakapo are birds so, like all birds, they reproduce sexually, and lay eggs that hatch into chicks.
A male kakapo has an inflatable thoracic air sac, with which it can create a subsonic mating boom. This mating boom can be heard several kilometres away. Females are attracted by the call, and drawn to the male's exact location by a higher pitched "ching" call.
The kakapo is the only parrot to have a 'lek' mating system, in which males gather in groups to compete for female attention in their 'calling posts', which are specially dug-out bowls in the earth. Once the females arrive, attracted by the mating calls, they wander among the males engaging in their courtship displays, as if weighing the merits of the various males before deciding upon a suitable mate.
Once the birds have mated, the female lays anywhere between one and four eggs, which must be incubated for around 30 days. The male has no part in raising the chicks.
it has cold blood and lays eggs
The Kakapo is the world's:only nocturnal parrot,only flightless parrot,heaviest parrot,rarest parrot.
Kakapo is a Maori word meaning "night parrot". This is because the kakapo is the world's only nocturnal parrot.
Yes. Kakapo are nocturnal, an unusual trait in a parrot.
yes
Kakapo is the Maori name. It means "night parrot".
No. The kakapo is a parrot, not an owl. It has the nickname of "owl parrot" because it has facial discs, whiskers and the soft feathers which characterise owls.
The kakapo originates from New Zealand. It is the world's only flightless parrot.
Yes, the Kakapo, a New Zealand parrot can't fly. Click on 'related links' below to see a picture of a Kakapo
Birds
Owl Parrot
Kakapo are birds. They are the world's only flightless parrot. Therefore, they lay eggs.
There are no sub-species of the kakapo. The only species of this flightless parrot is Strigops habroptila.