Birds do not provide milk for their young. Some birds are fed on special secretions from the parent birds' crop, and these may even be called crop milk, but it is not milk in the true sense of the word. Birds which feed their young with "crop milk" include pigeons, doves and flamingos.
Birds do not feed their young on milk. The lyrebird is a bird, so it does not feed its young milk.
Because it is a mammal - it produces milk, has hair/fur, and gives birth to live young.
No. Only mammals produce milk for their young. The only birds that produce milk are pigeons.
There isn't one. An animal who lays eggs isn't a mammal. An animal who gives milk to it's young is a mammal.
There are no birds which feed their young milk. In Australia there are two animals being of the order montreme which lay eggs and feed their young milk and they are the platypus and the echidna.
No, they are a bird. They do not have hair. They lay eggs and don't give birth to live young. And they do not feed their young milk.
a bird has feathes and a beak and a mammal gives milk to its birth
No, they regurgitate partially digested worms and other insects for their young.
Yes, Llamas do produce milk for their young. They typically produce 60 ml of milk at the time that she gives birth.
no,birds feed their young with worms and insects.
Birds such as Pigeons/Doves, Flamingos, and Male Emperor Penguins give their young a milk-like substance.
Bird have feathers instead of fur and do not feed their young milk.