Ducklings, Goslings, Chickens
Can all live without the mother
the only reason a mother is with her young ones if allowed is for protection
some bird species need to feed there young like a robin would
but ducks geese and chickens give nothing to there young except protection and survival skills.
Yes, they can feed themselves from hatching, but they will need food and water provided in their environment.
Yes, tounching the eggs or babies of any animal will cause the mother to abandon them because they now smell like people.
No, because then there would be no more ducks in the world.
Most of the time if you take the ducklings from the mother they will see you as their mother and follow you around so it might be hard to put them back with her and make them stay with her. So I don't know if I would remove them from her or not You are best off leaving the ducklings with the hen rather than removing them. Especially if you want mom to do the raising of the ducklings.
Ofcourse a baby salamander can live without it's mother.
Father: Drake Mother: Duck
Imprinting
she acts very extatic
Ducklings
leave them they will get scared being with you they can find there mother
you need to take the chicks away it wont be long before the mama takes the ducklings into water and the chicks will not survive
no because they'll get eaten
It depends how old the ducklings are, younger ducklings need a source of heat if they don't have a mother because they can't generate their own body heat. An older duckling, say it's almost fully feathered, can live on it's own.
If they are with a mother, pretty soon after they hatch, but if they are not, once thy get all of their feathers.
If it has a human to care for it, yes it can. But a duckling in the wild could not survive without it's mother. It would be easy prey and the elements and hunger would kill it if an other animal did not.