Hawk
A warm blooded animal is called a mammal
Owls are warm blooded as they use endothermic methods to keep their body at a constant rate.
Pipits (Scientific name: Anthus) are passerine birds and are warm blooded.
Warm-blooded creatures, like mammals and birds, try to keep the inside of their bodies at a constant temperature. They do this by generating their own heat when they are in a cooler environment, and by cooling themselves when they are in a hotter environment. To generate heat, warm-blooded animals convert the food that they eat into energy. They have to eat a lot of food, compared with cold-blooded animals, to maintain a constant body temperature. Only a small amount of the food that a warm-blooded animal eats is converted into body mass. The rest is used to fuel a constant body temperature.
warm blooded. all birds are.
Yes it is as hot as the sun.
The pigeons are a warmblooded animal . the warm blooded animal eat more food to keep its body temperature balance with atmospheric temperature . most of the birds are warm blooded animal .
Antarctica is too cold to support any kind of animal life -- there is no food chain there.
Every animal gets energy by consuming food.
prevent animals from moving around too much and keeping their surroundings warm
Eagle is a warm blooded animal cause every animal is thatπ
Reptiles are not warm blooded. Not enough heat.
They do this by "burning" fuel/food in their cells.
Trophic levels are levels in a food chain. Every food chain must begin with a producer (also called an autotroph), which is a plant that can produce its own food by photosynthesis. When a plant is eaten by a vegetarian animal (like an insect) which is eaten by a carnivore (a bird, for example) which is eaten by another carnivore (a snake, for example), each step in the process is another trophic level. The energy ultimately comes from the sun and from the producers (plants) at the bottom of the food chain.
Dog is the highest warm blooded animal
yes, hen is an warm blooded animal
Radiant energy to thermal energy