They both have a common ansestor.
the leg of a horse
No, they are carnivores. A praying mantis eats living insects that it captures in its spined front legs. They eat all forms of insects, but will also eat lizards, snakes and even small birds and rodents if they can.
No, they are carnivores. A praying mantis eats living insects that it captures in its spined front legs. They eat all forms of insects, but will also eat lizards, snakes and even small birds and rodents if they can.
A formation of 3 birds would meet this requirement. There will be 2 birds in front of the trailing bird, 2 birds trailing the lead bird, and the middle bird will have a single companion in front and behind it.
There can be a maximum of 4 birds in this scenario. Two birds in front, one bird in the middle, and two behind.
Yes. Though they both enable the organism to fly, they are different on the inside. Bird wings have tiny bones in them, while butterfly wings are kept rigid by fluid pressure. Therefore, they have a similar function but different structures and are analogous.
we need in the school doing homework with either birds
Neither one. Both homologous and analogous structures refer to similar structures. But a cat's front leg and a whale's front flipper have little in common. Homologous structures come from little evolutionary separation, and analogous structures come from convergent evolution. But the differences between a cat's front legs and a whale's front flipper result from divergent evolution. The common ancestor of mammals (cynodonts) has split into various groups with widely differing characteristics. One such group includes cats, and another includes whales. These two groups are not very related to each other, thus having no homologous structures, and have been put in very different environments, thus having no analogous structures.
you wear a corrupt battle axe andit appears in front of you
For the Birds was played in front of Monsters Inc.in 2001.
long rounded front legs
what is the significance of having a bird nest on the front door