He will stand on the edge of the nest or prehaps he could hunt for good.
If the mother bird is pregenet, she will need the nest more.
Hope that helps! :D
male fighting fish will built the nest for the female to reproduce..after builting the nest,this will attract the female fish to produce the egg inside the bubble..after that,the male will take care of the egg for about few week,but before that you must not keeping it with the female because the male will fighting with the female if she go nearer to the nest..If the little fishes have birth,you must remove the male for prevent eating his own baby..
It guards the nest and finds food.
If a brooding bird is disturbed, it may abandon the nest, and the eggs will not hatch.
Eagle is a the only monogamous bird that is it is believe to be the only bird that sticks to a partner. So when the female is pregnant, the male and the female build the new nest for the eaglet by using thorns, so as to defend the eggs against predators after which the male plucks its feather and put inside the nest inorder to cushion the sharp torns from pricking the eaglet. when the egg hatched, the parents will be responsible for feeding the new eaglet. After sometime, the mother will push the eaglet out of the nest and push her down the mountain top expecting her to flap her wings, if she does not then the father will fly down and pick her, this action is repeated until she can flap her wings. then she is ready to go hunting with the parents.
If the male is not interested in the female betta, (which is usually the case when bettas are to old, too young, or the female is not ready to have kids) the male will attack it. If the male is interested, then the male will make a bubble nest in order to keep the eggs safe. Then, the male will chase the female violently. This is called a courtship. The male will then fertilize the female's eggs and place them in the bubble nest. He will then chase the female away. He will either eat the eggs or guard them. If he guards them, eggs will continue to fall off the nest, so the male will pick them up with his mouth and put them back until the eggs hatch.
one time I heard that once you touch the egg the female won't warm the egg anymore, or if you touch the baby bird she will stop feeding the baby NC
The male builds a nest of bubbles, usually in a corner of the tank. Once the female is happy with the nest and is prepared to mate, he will encourage her to go with him under the nest. There he wraps himself around the female in an embrace, and ova are released and fertilised during this embrace. The couple then separate and the male follows the fertilised ova and picks them up in his mouth and blows them up into the nest of bubbles. This process continues until the female has been spawned out. He will then chase her away and she must now be removed otherwise he will kill her. He then tends the nest full of ova and wrigglers until the fry become free swimming when he or they must be removed from the tank otherwise he will eat the free swimming fry.
A cock bird is usually slightly larger than a hen (depending on the strain of bird). A male will spread it's tail feathers and drag them across the ground/floor when he is chasing after his female to go to nest. Females also spread their tail feathers, but they don't drag the feathers across the floor. Males make a distinctive "cooing" sound (more so than females). When eggs are present, males incubate during the day, females at night (they take 12-hour shifts). Males care for their squeakers once they leave the nest, while the female goes to nest again. Males tend to "defend" their perch space(s) more than females do (females just fly away). The top of a male's head is "flat" whereas a female's is rounded. Females just look more feminine than males do when looking at them as a whole.
The male won't make a female a nest because he doesn't know her. That's not true. A male won't build a bubble nest until: The female is introduced into the tank by a glass chimney and the male is released inside the tank. Seeing the female, the male will swim towards her, flaring. He will try to break into the chimney, though he is unable to reach the grand prize (yet!). It is normal for the female to be frightened at first, but once your female has vertical lines appearing on her body, then you are in good shape, if she doesn't, she might change her mind later! LOL! The male will then look possessed, as if in a trance. He will then begin building the bubble nest. This would be a good time to release the female (after the nest is done or well into its way). This is when the female realizes she could get her little fishie but kicked! It's usually the male who beats the crap out of the female. If your male didn't build a bubble nest, it means the female doesn't want to spawn, or because she's not ready ( I mean she doesn't have eggs in her fishie body)! Hope this helps! Bye now, and good luck!
Male cats do not go into heat like female cats do. Female cats go into heat to attract male cats for mating, while male cats are always ready to mate when a female cat is in heat.
No.
The Male doesn't want to let go of the female because he has to hold on to her to do it.