The Death Rate in turkeys is 100%: one turkey, one death, sooner or later.
Not directly; but the feed that turkeys eat has often been grown with fertilizer.
Yes, turkeys can and will often catch diseases from chickens. This is why it is advised to keep turkeys and chickens separate, this way the turkeys cannot catch the disease from the chickens.
Food pantries often do.
A rafter of turkeys.
A tom can kill a hen by slicing her sides open during mating with his spurs. Toms will fight and once in awhile kill each other, but NOT often.
Because they dont want to die by the farmer or whoever that is gonna kill it.
Wild turkeys that were introduced, yes, but not naturally occurring turkeys.
turkeys
yes they do!!
Wild turkeys do not weigh more than domestic turkeys on average. Wild turkeys move around a lot looking for food, domestic turkeys don't have to, causing them to get heavier.
One estimate is about 100 per year in the US.
No there are not turkeys in turkey