no
Yes, they are the same species. Its like when a tiger and a lion mate they may have a different classification but they are the same species.
no but humans can make horses mate with the same patner all there life
Great Blue herons can mate for life but it is not common. They usually stay with the same mate for one season and then move on to another the next.
Yes they do
King cobra's may or may not have the same mate for life, but even if they do will only get together during mating seasons.
King cobra's may or may not have the same mate for life, but even if they do will only get together during mating seasons.
Technically, no. Crocodiles are bigger.
Birds and crocodiles share the same ancestor... and so do dinosaurs. they are in the same clade. Both birds and crocodiles build nests, brood their eggs, "sing" to attract a mate and also have four chamber hearts. It has been reasoned that because the dinosaur, bird, and crocodiles all homolgous, dinosaurs TOO built nests, brooded their eggs, sang and also had four chamber hearts.
I don't believe they do. As the females sometimes mate with several other males later on. The males do the same.
Oscars are cichlids! They are from the South American group of cichlids. Fish can mate only within the same species. Oscars can only mate with other Oscars.
no
no. fishes are classified as Pisces and crocodiles are classified as reptiles