cowbird
The length of time parent birds care for their young varies depending on the species. Generally, parent birds will care for their young until they are able to fend for themselves and become independent. This can range from a few weeks to several months.
Mockingbirds are known to aggressively defend their nests and young from predators by dive-bombing or scolding intruders. They also provide food for their young by catching insects and worms. Parent mockingbirds will continue to care for and protect their young until they are independent enough to fend for themselves.
In general, male horses do not play a significant role in raising or caring for their offspring. The responsibility of caring for and raising the foal typically falls on the mare. Males may interact with their young and provide protection, but their involvement in parental care is limited.
Reptiles typically have limited parental care for their young, with some species providing protection for their eggs and hatchlings and others providing no care at all. Once the eggs are laid or the hatchlings emerge, the young are usually left to fend for themselves.
Sloth parents are usually solitary animals and do not provide parental care to their young after they are born. The young sloth learns to navigate its environment on its own, only relying on the mother for nourishment during the first few months of life. Once the young sloth is able to fend for itself, it separates from the mother and lives an independent life.
Yes they do provide parental care
Rattlesnakes do not take care of the young, they are fully capable of looking after them selves at birth.
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To some degree. Both birds and reptiles reproduce sexually and have offspring that resemble their parents. All birds and most reptiles lay eggs. One key difference is that reptiles are born largely able to fend for themselves while birds are fairly helpless and need their parents' care. The only reptiles that provide parental care are crocodiles and alligators, which help their young hatch and protect them from predators, but do not provide food.
They do give parental care and the mother typically cares for her young for four years.
Mammals and birds both care for their young well past the time they were born. The time period and amount of care differs between species though.
They have a mother in the biological sense i.e. the one that gave birth to them or laid the eggs, but the mother does not provide parental care.
Modern reptiles provide nothing for their young, they simply lay the eggs and leave. However there is evidence showing that some dinosaurs provided care for their young in large nests similar to what modern birds do.
Echinoderms are born as zooplankton. There is no parental care.
Both birds and mammals care for their young.
yes, their mums and dads get worms and other insects and they feed them
The length of time parent birds care for their young varies depending on the species. Generally, parent birds will care for their young until they are able to fend for themselves and become independent. This can range from a few weeks to several months.