A yabby is an Australian freshwater crayfish.
One of the top predators for yabbies is an Azure Kingfisher. Unlike other animals, the Azure Kingfisher dives under the water to catch the yabby. Other birds include kookaburras, spoonbills, jabirus and even common domesticated birds such as chickens, ducks and geese. These birds usually either use their beaks to pluck the yabby from the water or just eat them when the yabby are out of water.
The common yabby, Cherax destructor, is an Australian freshwater crustacean in the Parastacidae family.
A yabby is a threat to any number of species. Large fish such as the Murray cod are particularly fond of them, as are many species of bird. Larger crayfish, and even other yabbies if given the chance will eat them, as yabbies have cannibalistic tendancies. Animals such as the playtupus and others are also known to eat yabbies. Lets not forget humans too!
They are located on the sides of the yabby's body, under their cephalothorax (the large shell part that makes up the most of their body). Yabbies can clamp their gill openings shut so they can survive for a while out of water.
No. A yabby is not a mammal of any type. It is not even a vertebrate. A yabby is a freshwater crustacean.
Yabby You was born on 1946-08-14.
Common yabby was created in 1936.
Yabby You died on 2010-01-12.
no
No. A female yabby needs a male yabby to breed.
A yabby is an Australian freshwater crayfish.
That's a a pretty vague question, but I assume it is what type of animal is the yabby? Yabbies are actually a small type of freshwater crayfish, of which several different species occur.
A thing for mating with another partner.
No but they might attack them with their claws
The spelling is actually dependant on whether we are talking about yabby in the singular form or yabbies in the multiple. Spelling the word with an 'ie' at the end in the singular sense is a common spelling mistake.
you are mentally disturbed