Male swans are often a bit larger than the females and have a thicker neck; the knob at the base of the male's upper bill is larger than the female's knob.
While some bird species make it very easy to tell the male and female apart, swans are harder to distinguish between. The biggest difference is that the males are larger than females.
Male tadpoles have something hanging, unlike female tadpoles have nothing hanging.
The male swan has a penis, the female does not. Birds don't have penises. They use cloacae, like reptiles, the entrances of which are pressed close together when mating.
A female swan is called a "pen." The males are called "cobs."
Baby swans are called as cygnets. Adult male swans are called as cobs while adult female swans are called as pens.
Mute swans reproduce sexually, with the male inseminating the female. She then lays an average of 4 eggs, which the female takes care of for the 36 days it takes them to hatch.
I dont think that you can tell the diffence besides in their personalities...
Mute Swans have a white body.A brown neck.And orange or yellow beck. A female's beck is orange with a small knob.A male's beak is yellow.
Male writers are male, and female writers are female.
These words distinguish between male and female animals. The words are neither masculine nor feminine, however, because there is no gender in the English noun. cow - bull/steer =male, cow = female (steer is a castrated male) deer - stag=male, doe=female sheep - ram/wether=male, ewe=female (wether is castrated male cat - tom=male, queen=female dog - dog=male, bitch=female horse - stallion=male, mare=female chicken - rooster or cock=male, pullet or hen=female duck - drake=male, duck=female fox-vixen goose-gander cob-pen (swans) jenny-jack ( donkeys)
what is the difference between a male coyoted and a female coyoted
What is the difference between a female and male Kinkajou
Cob's the name for a male swan, pen for a female. A group of eggs, or baby swans, is ka a clutch. The general term for all baby swans is cygnet. The word comes to English, from the Latin cygnus for swan, by way of the French cygne. The scientific classification of swans is kingdom Animalia; phylum Chordata; class Aves; order Anseriformes; family Anatidae; subfamily Anserinae; genus Cygnus.