because that is where there food is.
No, birds cannot hover in place like helicopters. Helicopters use rotors to generate lift and stay in one spot, while birds rely on flapping their wings to stay airborne and move forward.
Birds hover in one spot to maintain their position in the air while searching for food, avoiding predators, or defending their territory. They use their wings and tail to adjust their position and stay in place, similar to how a helicopter hovers in the air.
Yes, some birds, like hummingbirds, can hover in one spot by rapidly flapping their wings.
The ocean. Dolphins don't stay in one spot, they constantly migrate (move from one spot to another where there is food)
The reason it is dangerous to stay in one spot on the battlefield is because it makes you an easy target for your enemies.
Birds fly in place by hovering due to their ability to rapidly beat their wings and adjust their body position to maintain a stable position in the air. This allows them to stay in one spot while searching for food or navigating their environment.
Sponges only stay in one spot because they are sessile. Sessile means that they are attached to a substrate and cannot move. Hope this helps!
Yes, a liquid must be contained in some way to stay in one spot. If not, it will flow and spread out due to gravity and surface tension.
yes it moves
They don't. Flying and hovering are two different actions, and the speed at which bats are able to flap their wings does not allow for them to stay in one spot for long. The angle of wings also plays a role--since a bat's wings are flat against the air they can not stay still. Few birds are able to hover as well. The humming bird, for example, have an angle to their wings and push the wind around them quickly enough to stay in a single place.
Burung birds are most commonly located in Southeast Asia, although they can sometimes be found in wildlife zoo that has an exhibit for birds. Burung birds usually have a colorful plumage.
Many birds do spend their entire lives in one country, and this does not mean just the flightless birds such as kiwi, emus, ostriches and rheas. Most parrots spend all their lives in one country: they do not migrate because they tend to live in tropical, sub-tropical and temperate areas. Kookaburras and kingfishers spend their lives in one country. Ground-dwelling birds such as pheasants and lyrebirds stay in one country, while marshland birds such as moorhens and swamphens also stay in one country. There are many species of birds that stay in one country.