because they dont consume alot of water and also becasue it comes out in their poo
Kiwi are birds, and birds do not urinate. They excrete uric acid not as urine, but as a white paste which minimises water wastage. .
I think we need to urinate to get the waste out of our bodies.
no birds eat chicken people and animals that arent birds eat chicken chicken is good many predatory birds will eat chickens if they catch them: hawks, eagles, and falcons are a few. my cocktail eats chicken and he is cute
Birds do not urinate as mammals do. The nitrogenous waste which forms urine in people comes out as solid, along with the intestinal waste. That's why many bird droppings are black-and-white.
Chicken droppings are richer than cow dung because a chicken's droppings contains both highly concentrated urea and fecal matter. Birds don't urinate like mammals do, and the urea that is collected by their single kidney is expelled in a highly concentrated form as droppings.
Birds do not urinate. They expel a mix of urine and feces (poop).
The white part of that lump of chicken manure is Uric acid. Chickens do not "urinate" like other creatures. The birds process water differently. Uric acid is expelled via the intestines with fecal matter and shows up as white paste along with the feces.
Yes you do
neither; prehistoric birds eventually became all types of birds, including chickens
Chickens urinate, defecate and lay eggs all from their vent.
Chickens do not urinate. They are uricotelic which means they expel uric acid instead of urea or ammonia like mammals. Birds use water more efficiently than other creatures. Liquid is dense and therefore adds weight to whatever container it is in...birds need to fly. Nature has designed a different way for birds to process the water they use and they do not store liquid waste within a bladder. When you see bird droppings (poop), you will notice a dark part and often a white part, the white part of a birds droppings is uric acid.
Yes. In order to call them chicken legs, they must come from a chicken.