Many animals do.
Insects such as the stick insect (mimics twigs), katydid (mimics green leaves), and some flies mimic the color scheme bees.
Snakes such as the corn snake mimics the venomous coral snake color pattern to confuse predators into thinking that the corn snake is venomous.
Mimicry is a structural adaptation where one species has evolved to resemble another species, providing protection from predators or other advantages. This can include Batesian mimicry, where a harmless species mimics the appearance of a harmful species, or Mullerian mimicry, where two harmful species resemble each other to reinforce a warning signal to predators.
Mimicry allows an animal to resemble another organism that may be toxic, dangerous, or unappealing to predators, thus deterring predation. By blending in with a harmful model, the mimicking species gains protection through deception, reducing the likelihood of being targeted by predators.
Animals survive on their own when born and raised in their natural habitat. Animals can survive on their own when humans have not interfered with their maturing and learning process at their mother side; or in rare cases when human experts go through a lengthy process of reintroducing a captive animal into to their native habitat. Human interference can consist of humans capturing an animal, an animal being born in human captivity, or destroying their habitat. Birds, reptiles, and small mammals can sometimes be released (or release themselves) from human captivity and survive on their own if the habitat is conducive to their natural way of life and they are healthy enough to take care of themselves.
This is known as mimicry, a form of adaptation that allows an organism to resemble another organism or object for protection from predators or to enhance hunting success. Mimicry can be either Batesian, where a harmless organism mimics a harmful one, or Mullerian, where two harmful species evolve to look alike.
mimicry
By helping them look like a different animal, therefore the animals will not want to eat them.
Mimicry can help animals survive by allowing the animal to avoid being eaten. It can act like a predator and scare away its own predators. There are many such examples of animals acting like something else to survive.
Mimicking.Where did you go to school at Idaho.
Mimicry
It depends on the animal.
Animal mimicry is the habit of imitating other animals,such as imitating their sounds,their habits....etc,used to confuse their predators,to communicate with other animal of same species..etc.
Camouflage helps an animal to be disguised as if it were the surrounding objects. This way the pray can hide from the predator and be able to survive longer because it wasn't found and eaten by the animal hunting it.
The parrot is the animal that is considered the animal who mimics people.
camouflage or mimicry
no. mimicry is when one organism mimics another to survive. a rabbit mimics the snow, witch is not a living organism.
a cimp
It can help animals by giving the food water and shelter and some structures are adaptation