Yes you can. You may get some pecking and fighting if the ages are vastly different. Weaker birds (younger) will be subjected to "the pecking order" and bossed around by the older stronger ones but this can happen with chicks hatched from the same clutch if some hatch out a day or two after the first batch.
If millipedes are bought in a pet store they can cost $2-$4 each, if not more. (Price depends on species). If Millipedes are found in nature, they are free.
The idea to consider human nature and nature itself as separate entity is a philosophical question. Some philosophers have argued that human nature is nature in itself. If divided, then they do not oppose each other because they are one nature.
Nature is a range of animals lol :)x
in the nature white tiger's live in the cold
God to some people but to others all nature and its beauty is credited to chance.
In most species - nothing. In a very few species, he will hang around and wait for the chicks to hatch and then help rear them - for instance ringed teal.
In nature a chicken will sit on a nest of egs keeping them warm. This helps the emryo develop in to the chick. when hatched the chicks natural body heat mechonism is still developing and therefore they need warmth. In the wild a chicken will still hudle the chicks together and keep them warm until they are able to create their own body heat
Yes, since all birds born (hatched) can't fly (they were just hatched that's why). Sometimes nature is cruel and chicks are hatched without wings , or perhaps a deformed wing
No. A broody hen will hatch a brood of chicks the way nature intended. Incubators or a brood hen are the only two ways to get chicks, egg won't hatch into chicks without the proper conditions of heat and humidity for 21 days.
You migrate a croconaw/feraligater, breed em with a ditto, and check the nature of the hatched eggs.
Art should imitate nature.
Art should imitate nature.
Type your.Art should imitate nature. answer here...
You can get the information you need online or at the place where you bought your eggs. If you are wanting a rare breed, some people purchase already fertilized eggs and use an incubator. It is a personal choice. If you incubate, you will usually have more chicks than if you let nature take its course.
If foreign Pokemon were to breed together, the everstone doesn't work right.
Every bill that deals with money or anything in that nature must begin in the House of the Representatives
All you need to do is look at it's stats, and it should say something about it's nature (eg.: My newly hatched Marrep on Pokemon Diamond. It has a Naughty Nature) Or, if you are playing Pokemon Mystery Dungeon, they will ask a quiz. Hoped this helped!