internal
All birds fertilize their eggs internally. A male bird has to mate with a female in order for a fertilized egg to be produced.
External fertilization occurs when sperm and eggs unite in the open, rather than within specialized organs during internal fertilization. Turtles, eagles, and dogs most definitely undergo internal fertilization. Mosquitoes and houseflies, on the other hand, undergo external fertilization.
It can fly
Bald eagles fertilize internally. After mating, the female eagle stores the male's sperm in her body, which allows her to fertilize her eggs internally before laying them. Once fertilized, the eggs are laid in a nest and incubated until they hatch.
All vertebrates reproduce sexually. Birds are one of the main groups of vertebrates, so they reproduce sexually.
Eagles are homeothermic animals, meaning they maintain a constant internal body temperature regardless of external conditions. They are warm-blooded vertebrates, which allows them to be active in various environmental conditions. Unlike ectotherms, which rely on external heat sources to regulate their body temperature, eagles generate their own heat through metabolic processes. Therefore, they are not ectothermic or poikilothermic.
They would not do so in the wild, humans would have to genetically do this, and I don't believe it would work.
Bald eagles, like all birds, are warm-blooded animals. This means they can regulate their body temperature internally, maintaining a consistent body temperature regardless of the external environment.
It is unlikely that an eagle of this species can live in the wild and survive for 20 years.
Yes, all birds are vertibrates. A vertibrate is any animal with a backbone, so all higher animals (birds, mammals, reptiles, etc) are vertibrates. examples of non-vertibrates are jellyfish and earthworms.
Yes. However, like most birds, the ears are hidden by feathers, and have no external lobes.
After courtship, the eagles find a branch on which to mate. The male eagles mounts the female from behind, straddling her back. Since male eagles do not have a penis, he delivers his sperm to her trough a clocal kiss. When the male has mounted the female, he will rub his cloca against the female's, flapping his wings and moving from side to side. Then, sperm will travel from the male's testicles into the female's clocal opening. He will then dismount her and soon, eaglets will be born.