There is no specific record regarding the most chicks a bird can have, but during a single breeding period, female emus have been known to lay between twenty and fifty eggs. Whether or not all the eggs hatch is another matter.
Most baby birds are born with feathers called 'down'.
Well, baby chickens are yellow, but most birds are just grey when yhey are newly hatched.
Most baby birds are called chicks. Some kinds of birds have specific names in English. For example, a baby goose is a gosling, a baby pigeon is a squab, a baby swan is a cygnet.
The tweeting of a baby bird is a signal that it wants to be fed. In most species, baby birds eat regurgitated food that they are given by their parents, so anything that you feed a baby bird must be very easily digestible.
in someways, they call it chickling, hatchling, hatchlet, or regularly baby birds most of the times.
The Bird of Paradise is a very beautiful bird.
Different bird species require different diets, and there are many bird species that could be found in any given area. Simply knowing the geographic location is not enough to narrow down what would be an appropriate food. If you find a wild baby bird, your best option is to find a licenced wild bird rehabilitator. In most cases, keeping native bird species without a license is illegal in the United States. "Keeping" includes hand-rearing orphaned baby birds.
well if that baby bird is your pet and it can nearly fly,....... no. Trust me i have a baby bird for a pet.
Birds are not poisonous.
Yes they will. That is actually a myth most likely told by parents that don't want their children to touch baby birds.
For the same reason babies crawl before they walk. Hopping is easier, they have to learn to walk. Edit: It depends on the bird. Robins hop, and so do most sparrows. Mourning Doves walk, but they are just as big as a robin. It does not depend on age, but instead species.
You shouldn't be looking for baby birds. More then likely birds in your area are protected by law. This is so for Songbirds, which are most commonly found on the ground. Even if the bird is not, it's not a good idea. It'll just put the young bird in more pain then it was in when it fell to the ground. Now I know for a fact you are not professional or you wouldn't have asked, which means you'll only harm it. Baby birds do not need your help, and are in trees with their mothers for a reason. Do yourself, your health, and your money a favor by keeping your hands off of birds. They carry mites anyway, and I know you won't want a fine for breaking the law.