they both can fly both are birds bothcan be brown
frogs,ducks
Yes, ducks may eat frogs as part of their diet. Ducks are omnivorous and will consume a variety of insects, small fish, amphibians, and plants as part of their natural feeding behavior.
Because the rabbiting duck lives there (the two form a close symbiosis). Rabbiting ducks catch small shellfish and water insects, and the quaking frogs follow them, scavenging the leftovers. Quaking frogs are beneficial to the ducks because the frogs also prey on a type of aquatic parasite that sometimes attacks the ducks. Additionally, the quaking frogs' croaks ward off most major predators of the rabbiting ducks. Quaking frogs have also been known to form a similar symbiosis with creaking ducks, a relative of the rabbiting ducks.
They rhyme.
No, most animals are like us; no two are alike.
Mainly small fish, frogs, small ducks.
Fanny Fire-Fly has written: 'The ducks and the frogs' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Frogs, Children's poetry, Juvenile poetry, Animal welfare, Ducks
they are both homologous structures
they bend...
we're both animals?
tadpoles are frogs before they grow into frogs, just like fetuses are babies before they grow into babies...
Biotic factors of the ecosystem