Mostly for flight.
Yes. Takahe are birds, and all birds have wings. Even flightless birds have wings, though they are of little or no use.
if you use the birds DNA, then yes, as the birds DNA doesn't say *no wings*
Birds use their wing muscles to spread out their wings when they are ready to fly. Birds use thermal air currents, updrafts, and wind to soar and flap their wings when needed.
They don't, they use wings.
Most birds use their wings for flight. Some of the flightless birds, or birds which do not fly much, may use their wings just for balance, especially when perching (e.g. chickens). For some flightless birds such as the kiwi, their wings appear to be without purpose.
Penguins are the birds that use their wings as flippers.
Two main factors help birds fly: their own strength and propulsion. Birds use propulsion by turning their wings, lifting them upward, then turning them downward. As they lift the wings, air pushes up from below and pushes the bird forward.
To say that birds use wings and feathers to fly, so all birds can fly, would be false. Not all birds can fly. An ostrich is an example of a bird that cannot fly.
No, birds have lungs in their chest cavity not their wings.
Both bats and birds are warm-blooded vertebrates that use their forelimbs as wings.
I don't know but i think the answer is no~Unknown Name
Two, all birds have two wings.