yes the turkey vulture has many different parts of body. one of them is the brain it works the same way our brain works. it also has a stomach for digesting it's prey, and it has skin, and a body .believe it or not the turkey vultures have blood too . it also has a skin.
They can use their, beaks, wings, and feet (talons).
predators
Turkeys typically live in flocks and roost in trees at night to avoid predators. During the day, they forage for food on the ground, eating seeds, plants, insects, and small animals. Turkeys are social birds and have a complex communication system involving various vocalizations and body displays.
teeth can not fight off of those bacteria and infection
Turkeys are covered with feathers.
feel, move, fight infection/disease, heal themselves
feel, move, fight infection/disease, heal themselves
People kill tigers. They sell their body parts for money at the blackmarket. Some Chinese use tiger parts to put it in their medicine, in which they think is very powerful.
No, but they are hosts to certain protozoans, such as Ophryocystis elektroscirrha , which affects only butterflies. The monarch has a species defense against predators, which are toxic glycosides found in some parts of its body -- these are unpalatable to predators.
The Latin equivalent of the English word 'fighter' is pugnator. It derives from the Latin noun 'pugna', which means 'fight'. The Latin word may refer to a fighter who uses body parts or weapons in the fight. Likewise, the Latin word also may refer to a fight in which body parts or weapons are used. The scale may range from a one-on-one street fight all the way up to a wartime fight on a battlefield.
Behavior, colors and smells are ways that ladybugs avoid predators. The insects in question (Coccinellidae family) engage in bleeding strange-colored, strange-smelling liquids from body parts and in playing dead. They have bright, strong body colors that warn potential predators of nauseating scents, tastes and textures if considered as food sources.
Turkeys have about 55-60 ml of blood per kg of body weight. A typical turkey weighs around 15-20 pounds (6.8-9.1 kg), so it would have roughly 340-540 ml of blood in its body.