Budgies and their adaptations!
Thanks for watching !!! ;)
The PowerPoint is over you may
return to your seat or position.
designed by Péter Puklus for Prezi
Class of Vertebrate
Budgies are suited as a well known part of the bird family. they are known as Budgies, Budgerigar, and Melopsittacus undulatus. luckily they have survived the last 5 million years they are birds because they lay eggs and have feathers.
Where do they come from?
Budgies are indigenous to Australia however some were taken back to England by the English eventually mating with English birds creating English breeds. Also luckily in the last 5 million years they have survived the harsh australian desert.
Physical adaptations of the Budgie
A short and powerful beak used to break seeds and fruit. Also using it colors it can imitate other more powerful birds in a tactic called mimicry or enemy confusion.
Behavioral adaptations of budgies
Some of the more noticeable adaptations of the budgie are that they are always in groups either with each other or with other birds for protection or even there owners for example I keep my budgie in the living room because he requires about 4 hours worth of socialism. however there natural enemies are eagles and hawks especially during breeding season.
The diet of a Budgie
The average diet of a budgie consists of seeds, fruits such as bananas and strawberries, and vegetables like cucumbers and pickles however this is the common house budgie AKA my budgie the wild budgie eats fruits nuts and seeds and a wide variety of vegetables.
ask about the chart
for an explanation
by: Yuel mulugheta abraha
A little video on Budgies
boobs
Present Remotely
Send the link below via email or IM
Present to your audience
- Invited audience members will follow you as you navigate and present
- People invited to a presentation do not need a Prezi account
- This link expires 10 minutes after you close the presentation
- A maximum of 30 users can follow your presentation
- Learn more about this feature in our knowledge base article
Budgies and their adaptations!
No description
by
Tweet