aves which is the class for all birds
No, flamingos are not invertebrates; they are vertebrates. Flamingos belong to the class Aves, which includes all birds, and they possess a backbone. Invertebrates, on the other hand, are animals without a backbone, such as insects, mollusks, and jellyfish.
Flamingos belong to the phylum Chordata, which includes animals that possess a notochord at some stage of development. Within this phylum, flamingos are classified in the class Aves, indicating that they are birds. They are part of the order Phoenicopteriformes and the family Phoenicopteridae.
flamingos has no teeth
No, flamingos are birds.
yes flamingos do migrate
yes they live with other flamingos which is called a 'couple'.
There is no special word for a group of flamingos, they're a flock of flamingos.
There are no flamingos that are naturally green.
yes
There are about 1.5 to 2.5 million flamingos.
flamingos structural and to surrive in its HABItat
Flamingos aren't extinct