Yes, they do hibernate in the winter.
No. Cardinals are active year round. Birds do not hibernate.
They do not hibernate.
Pandas do not migrate, they are sedentary animals primarily staying in their home range. They do not hibernate either, as they rely on bamboo as their main food source throughout the year and do not need to store food for the winter.
No, grey whales do not hibernate. They travel long distances between feeding and breeding grounds each year and are active throughout this migration. Grey whales do, however, fast during the breeding and calving season.
no
Bears and badgers hibernate.
to keep away the cold
because they can sleep at night
Hedgehogs badgers rodents owls
Of those species only one, the hedgehog, hibernates. Squirrels and badgers often reduce their activity during the winter, but they do not hibernate. Among the British mammals, hedgehogs, dormice and bats are the only ones that truly hibernate. A host of reptiles, amphibians and insects also hibernate.
bats, bears, small mammals such as badgers... Animals that hibernate, mostly.
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.
Bears,Birds,Badgers,Skunks,Mice,Raccoons frogs and lots more
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?"
Raccoons, opossums, chipmunks, squirrels, whitetail deer, mountain lions, badgers, bears, coyotes, garter snakes, snapping turtles, painted turtles, muskrats, and many birds and fish and also many more animals.
coyotes eat badgers