Yes, mother geese typically stay together with their goslings. After hatching, the mother goose is very protective and leads her goslings to water and food, teaching them essential survival skills. The family often stays close-knit, with the mother and sometimes the father goose actively guarding and caring for the young until they are capable of fending for themselves. This strong familial bond helps ensure the goslings' survival in their early stages.
Yes, goslings stay with their parents, Canadian geese, for protection and guidance after hatching. They remain closely bonded to their parents for several months, learning essential survival skills and social behaviors. The parents actively care for the goslings, keeping them safe from predators and teaching them how to forage for food. This close association is crucial for the goslings' development and survival in the wild.
A flock of geese is a group of geese flying or on the ground together. Geese often travel in a V formation during migration to reduce air resistance and save energy. These social birds communicate through honking calls to stay connected and navigate together.
Geese do not sleep while flying, they stay awake throughout their journey.
Yes they do some eggs can"t live without there mother geese for example stay together and wont leave their eggs. remember when it hatches who does the teaching like swimming, how to hunt, how to run away from a predator I live near a river and it has a lot a geese, birds, and ducks so i would take my advice................................
No, dolphins do not keep their mate for life. Males and females do not stay together but a calf will stay with its mother.
They never leave them. They stay together until death.
well yes they do, do to their family
I've been told by people who have degrees in Veternary Science that it is instinct for geese to travel in groups. I happen to disagree. Considering that they have been hunted for hundreds of years, I think they realized they had to stay together for their own safety. Geese and especially ducks are not stupid. If you observe them long enough you will see that they reason and respond to situations.
Geese will choose a mate when they are about three years old and will stay monogamous for life, raising new families together each year. If one mate dies, the other mate will sometimes wait several years before choosing a new partner or might even stay single.
ducks and geese fly south every winter to stay in a warmer climate where food is more abundant.
To begin with, baby platypuses only stay with their mother. The father has nothing to do with raising the young.Baby platypuses suckle from their mother for three to four months. They then spend several more months with the mother, learning to hunt. Young platypuses stay with their mother for up to a year.
No, the father scorpion has nothing to do with raising the young.