Mosquitos don’t have teeth. Also, birds dont have teeth, they do have ridges on their bills that help them grip food but its not considered teeth. So none of those listed have teeth.
it depends on which kind of parrot they come in all sizes
The amazon parrot and all other birds are vertebrates
a parrot just sit's there and maybe it'll talk.it's all up to the owner and how he has his parrot trained or nonm trained
yes i give popcorn to my parrot all the time
The amazon parrot and all other birds are vertebrates
Bob is a mosquito. So stay away from all BOBS
snails,mosquito fish,frogs, mosquito that is all i know
cobras do not have teeth they have fangs (sometimes they are poisonous) *facepalm* ALL snakes have teeth, some have teeth AND fangs. NO snake has just fangs. And ALL cobras are venomous (you do not mean poisonous)! They are all Elapids (i.e. they are proteroglyphous). There's also opisthoglyphous (rear-fanged). This fits many Colubrids, such as the Boomslang, the Parrot snake, the Lyre snake, and MANY more. And there's solenoglyphous (vipers' delivery system) as well as aglyphous-no fangs (pythons, most colubrids, boids, etc.).
Like all birds (ever eat chicken?) a parrot has a bony skeleton.
All Out is a specific type of mosquito repellent that works in a vaporizer. It is poisonous to the insects, but can be safely inhaled by humans.
Malaria is mosquito borne.Name of that creature is mosquito. The variety is anopheles mosquito. Sir Robert Ross called it as mosquito with dappled wings. It sits on the all with an angle of about 45 degree.
A raven makes a sound sort of like the cross between a crow and a toad, it is hoarse and it is ever changing, they too have almost a perfect form of speech and can mimic the sounds of its environment. There are 3 by my house and each one sounds different but they all have commonality. they all are very hoarse sounding compared to a crow. they are the alpha crow so to speak. but they are similar to a parrot in the respect that they CAN learn different sounds and words too .... definitely one of the smartest birds I have encountered