Falcons don't really camouflage. Their predators are either land animals, which they can fly away from, or other birds, which they will fight or fly away from. However, they do have mottled brown and black feathers that help them to hide in their normal habitat, which is either a grassland, a plain, or a tundra. They nest in cliffs or other tall structures, and their sandy brown and black color helps them camouflage against that, I suppose.
Yes, it helps it blend in.
no
yes they do
camouflage
This depends on your definition of camouflage. It can be said that all animals camouflage themselves to some degree, called Crypsis camouflage. i guess a crypsis camouflage
no shark do not camouflage
Camouflage
no they do not
Many insects use camouflage. Name one of the laws of camouflage.
Camouflage covers the entire spectrum of defense mechanisms employed by an animal to hide in its environment. It involves properties like "blending coloration", "cryptic behavior".
Gyr Falcon, Saker Falcon, Peregrine Falcon, Lanner Falcon, Mauritius Falcon, Pygmy Falcon, Merlin Falcon, American Kestrel, and Prairie Falcon.
Camouflage originates from French.
they camouflage to a whale
Squirrels do not use camouflage.
Sloths camouflage by there fur