No. Doves are birds, and birds do not provide milk for their young.
Some birds are fed on special secretions from the parent birds' crop, and these may even be called crop milk, but it is not milk in the true sense of the word. Birds which feed their young with "crop milk" include pigeons, doves and flamingos.
Birds do not provide milk for their young. Some birds are fed on special secretions from the parent birds' crop, and these may even be called crop milk, but it is not milk in the true sense of the word. Birds which feed their young with "crop milk" include pigeons, doves and flamingos.
A parent of a squab is called a pigeon or dove. Squabs are young pigeons or doves that have not yet reached maturity.
Mammals, hence the name mammary gland for breast.
No. No birds feed milk to their young. This characteristic is unique to mammals alone. Only mammals have mammary glands, which are necessary to produce milk. Ducks and geese do not produce milk, so, no they do not feed milk to their young. That is something that mammals do, of which waterfowl are not. Baby ducklings are hatched knowing how to find food and eat. The mother may lead them to a good spot for some tasty roots, but the ducklings know how to eat all by themselves. As mentioned, no species of birds provide milk for their young. Some birds are fed on special secretions from the parent birds' crop, and these may even be called crop milk, but it is not milk in the true sense of the word. Birds which feed their young with "crop milk" include pigeons, doves and flamingos.
No, lizards do not produce milk for their young. They typically lay eggs and the hatchlings are independent from birth.
Birds such as Pigeons/Doves, Flamingos, and Male Emperor Penguins give their young a milk-like substance.
Yes, doves do feed their young a substance often referred to as "pigeon milk," which is not milk in the traditional sense but a nutrient-rich secretion produced by the lining of their crop. Both male and female doves produce this secretion to feed their chicks, especially during the first few days after hatching. This "milk" is essential for the rapid growth and development of the young birds.
Birds do not provide milk for their young. Some birds are fed on special secretions from the parent birds' crop, and these may even be called crop milk, but it is not milk in the true sense of the word. Birds which feed their young with "crop milk" include pigeons, doves and flamingos.
No, a cod does not give its young milk. Only mammals give milk to their young, and the cod is a fish.
Pigeons do not have milk glands so they cannot nurse their young.
Birds do not provide milk for their young. Some birds are fed on special secretions from the parent birds' crop, and these may even be called crop milk, but it is not milk in the true sense of the word. Birds which feed their young with "crop milk" include pigeons, doves and flamingos.
Yes, bats are mammals and feed their young milk.
no
Milk
They give thick milk after birth, the milk is high in nutrients, which vital for the young.
Yes
yes