Yes. The male emu scratches up grass, twigs, leaves and bark around a shallow hole or hollow in the ground, in grasslands or open bushland. The nest measures between one and two metres wide, and the walls are about ten centimetres thick.
The emu's nest is just a shallow hole in the ground, or a platform made of grass, lined with leaves, grass, twigs and bark.
Budgies don't make a nest like other birds. In the wild they prefer a shallow hole in the ground or in a hollow tree.
The emu does not burrow. An emu's nest is a shallow hole, usually by a bush, and lined with leaves, grass, and bark.
Emus lay their eggs in a nest that they build on the ground. The male emu is responsible for incubating the eggs until they hatch, which takes about 8 weeks.
yes they make their own home which is a nest.
In a hole
in a hole or a nest
Their nest
Yes Female European rabbits will dig a fairly shallow nest burrow and line it with nesting material (including a lot of fur) in which they will leave the babies, they will then stop up the entrance hole with material (including soil) to keep the warmth in and probably to keep other animals out while they are off finding themselves food. The stop is usually pretty loose so some air can get in. Often the nest is just a shallow scrape rather than a 'proper' burrow.
Parakeets need a nest box but not a "nest" in the traditional sense. A typical Parakeet nest box measures about 10" by 10" by 10" with a hole in the front (like a bird house) and a back where you can remove the top half to check the chicks and clean it out. In the bottom of the box, you place a wooden insert the same size as the box with a concave cut-out in the center (makes a shallow dish so the eggs stay in one place). You hang the box on the outside of the cage with the hole and a dowel (for perching) mated and secured up against a seed cup hole. No nesting material is used at all and the birds like it that way.
Niether
The emus' breeding season begins at the end of Autumn and goes through to Spring, so in Australia, this is from about May to October. A clutch of emu eggs averages around 10-12 eggs, but these are not necessarily from the same female. The male, who incubates the eggs, may court more than one female for the nest he builds. He builds a nest in a shallow depression in the ground, lining it with bark, grass, twigs, and leaves. The male incubates the eggs, during which time he does not eat, drink, or pass any waste matter, surviving only on accumulated body fat. The male stays on the nest twenty-four hours a day, standing only every couple of hours to turn the eggs. It takes between 56-60 days for the eggs to hatch. The chicks, which are distinctly striped and unique in appearance, stay with the father for 5-7 months. Young emus reach sexual maturity between 2 and 3 years of age. The average lifespan of emus can be 10 to 20 years.