If the animal is under stress or is simply a younger female with little egg-sperience (allow the pun) then yes she might do that. Even human females have been known to abandon their young.
Mallards are capable of foraging for themselves as soon as they leave the nest. At about four months they are able to take care of themselves in the wild, but often remain with their mother for up to a year, especially in populations that do not migrate.
Study leave.
If you cut your own grass and leave the cut grass on your lawn it acts like a self fertilizer
leave it alone
Is it as you are mowing or as you leave it sit there? Obviously the lawn will die if you leave the lawnmower sit outside which deprives grass of sunlight and nutrients. If you are talking about the grass dying as you are mowing, it is probably too early to be mowing the grass. This has happened to me when I mow the grass to early in the spring or I cut freshly seeded grass.
I actually leave the clippings, but I have a mulching blade on my mower which cuts up the grass a little finer that non-mulching blades. If you have a mulching blade and leave the grass cuttings they just decompose but if not and you leave too much, it could cause some issues, more thatch, etc.
We need grass to fill up space, not to leave empty space, and to look nice instead of dirt.
you cant it will heal itself if you leave it on the grass
Mostly in May when the grass was tall
Leave It to Beaver - 1957 The Grass Is Always Greener 2-15 was released on: USA: 8 January 1959
No, grass can't "eat" anything. Well, sort of, but only in the sense that grass feeds on nutrients in the soil, and a decomposing rabbit corpse will leave nutrients in the soil.
No pandas sleep on grass and leave's - they eat bamboo