When the honey guide bird finds a bee hive with honey, it makes a certain noise. Then the honey badger follows the sound of the bird until it find it, and the bee hive. The badger then breaks down the bee hive and the badger and the bird eat all the honey :) and live happily ever after ;p
No
Honeyguides birds and honey badgers have a relationship of mutalism. They both benefit from the relationship. Honeyguide birds show the Badgers where the beehives are. The Badgers break them open to eat the honey and bee larvae, and they leave scraps which the birds can eat.
Honey badgers use their tails to climb trees to raid the nests of birds.
Honey is the honey badger's favorite treat, although they do not rely on honey, but the nutritious bee hive is a sought after delicacy. The honey guide bird, has a habit of leading honey badgers to the bees' nests, and eats the honey, larvae, and wax from bee hives.
The honey guide bird and the honey badger have a mutalistic relationship, because both the bird and badger benefit, because the bird locates the honey while the badger attacks the bees and the bird can break through the bees nests hard shell and they both snack.
Yes.
yes bigger predators like honey badgers, wart hogs and secretary birds
There are Eurasian badgers, hog badgers, American badgers, ferret badgers, honey badgers, and stink badgers. I'm guessing that your question was, "What kinds of badgers are there?"
Yes, badgers do like honey. If you find a set you should smother the grass outside with honey and sit quietly at night. The badgers will then come out but if you make a noise they will retreat.
Honey badgers are not native to the US. They are native to Africa, the Middle East, and India.
A badgers staple diet is earthworms, when the weather conditions are mild and damp, badgers will head for areas where they know to find worms on the surface.
honey badgers reproduce sexually. they reproduce in mid-spring