Due to their fairly small size and solitary, reclusive nature, honey badgers are particularly difficult to see in the wild. While honey badgers are wide spread across most of Africa and beyond, most sightings do not last more than a few minutes, often as an individual trots across a road and disappears into the undergrowth. In South Africa the Kgalagadi Transfrontier National Park (formerly known as the Kalahari Gemsbok, South Africa) is an excellent area to see honey badgers, especially in the winter when they may forage throughout the day. In Namibia there are frequent sightings in the Etosha National Park, and in Zimbabwe badgers make a habit of raiding tourist camp dustbins during the night in the Mana Pools and Hwange National Parks (Nyamepi and Sinamatella camps). In Kenya, the Tsavo National Park is well known for sightings of honey badgers. I got that from www.honeybadger.com .
Honey badger easily.
the relashionship between a honey guide and honey badger is, when a honey guide smells honey he sings a little tune and waits for a honey badger to come. when the honey badger reaches the honey guide the bird flies to were the scent of honey came from leading the badger towards honey.
really they are in Africa, the honey guide bird guides the badger to the honey and then the badger breaks it and the badger and the honey guide bird eats it.they are a great team when they searches honey.................................................................. lol=laugh out loud
honey badger of course
The honey guide bird and the honey badger have a mutalistic relationship, because both the bird and badger benefit, because the bird locates the honey while the badger attacks the bees and the bird can break through the bees nests hard shell and they both snack.
Fun fact: Honey badgers can fend off lions, but they can't do the same with cheetahs, even though a lion would destroy a cheetah!
Honey badger dont care. Honey badger consumes whatever he wants.
Honey Badger Don't Care was created in 2011.
Bees use nectar from flowers to produce honey, the honey badger then feed on the honey that the bees produce.
The honey badger can withstand the bite of a venomous reptile. They are extremely vicious. Why do you even have a honey badger... I'm pretty positive that the honey badger is not allowed without zoological accreditation-AZA, USDA pre-inspection and okay from your city/county/state...
symbiotic relationship of honey badger and honeyguide bird
The honey badger is native to Africa, Southwest Asia, and the Indian Subcontinent.