if they are owned by someone it is called free range and if they are just wild it is called wild
Turkeys and ducks do not typically mate with each other in the wild. They have different mating behaviors, social structures, and reproductive strategies. Additionally, interspecies mating usually results in infertile offspring.
Some common birds that can be seen on a farm include chickens, ducks, geese, turkeys, and pigeons. Depending on the location of the farm, you may also see robins, crows, sparrows, and other wild birds that inhabit the surrounding area.
All birds live in the wild, even domesticated ones such as chickens and turkeys have ones that are wild.
And they can be cooked together too....i.e. the TurduckinYep - completely possibleYes, they can. My sister has a "farm", where in one pen, she has turkeys, chickens and emus (of all things)...and they have ducks and geese as well. Every day, she allows the chickens and turkeys out of the pen, and they wander the yard with the ducks and geese. The only time any harm has come to any of them is when the male emu gets ticked off and tramples one. ----------------Yes, they can. I have chickens, ducks and turkeys living together and they do quite well. Sometimes my one, white duck (Donald) wants to 'hump' the female turkey, though. She's not interested in the venture so I feel bad that she's being bugged. My turkey, however, is an older turkey, almost a year now and she's started to lay eggs. I think her maturity brings on Donald's sexual desires, but I don't know this to be a fact. I never see Donald 'humping' his female ducks but often seems to be at the female turkey. Go figure! :o)-------------------NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Turkeys shouldn't live with chickens because chickens transmit diseases that are fatal to turkeys, such as blackhead disease (shows no effect on chickens but is fatal to turkeys). Turkeys really shouldn't be within a half mile of chickens. I kept my turkeys only a few hundred feet of my chickens and they did fine.-----------------------I have been told that the wild turkeys can but not a lot of the domestic ones. They can pick up ecoli from the chickens and mine seem to have. I had mine in the same pin and at first they seem to do all right but then they started dropping. I've lost 4 out of 10 so far and they just seem to quit eating. I am trying to research more on this but I have lost some turkeys. I have a Holland White that seems to do good but my Bronze Wings are not.
Humans, rodents (rabbits, squirrels etc.), birds (wild birds, chickens, turkeys, ducks, geese etc.), goats, sheep, hogs, cattle etc. Contributor: Xenia (Rainbow Ranch Farms, livestock expert).
Yes, both chickens and turkey's can and do fly although they do not fly high or far. Many chickens are wing clipped when they are young but they are all capable of limited flights. Wild turkey's use flight to escape predators but the turkeys raised for meat on farms are often too heavy for any real spectacular flights.
Yes. Black bears will kill wild turkeys or chickens if they catch them, but they usually do not since wild chickens can fly.
The state of the Hawaii has no wild turkeys. All other 49 states have wild turkeys that native to the area.
wild turkeys are not but some other turkeys are
Why liquor raffles are called glass turkeys is not widely known. It is possible the name came from the liquor called Wild Turkey.
Gaggle
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.