Toucans protect their young by using their bills to fend off predators and by guarding the nest. Toucans also feed their young and coach them in flying.
Toucans mainly feed on berries and seeds, but they also eat small insects, reptiles, and birds.
If there is very little food, a grown toucan will occasionally eat a young toucan in order to survive. Toucans generally only eat fruit, however.
There are many types of Toucans, and each has their own diet. A Choco toucans require a diet that is high in fruit and iron.
none, the bare live young
Toucans eat fruit, insects, young birds, eggs, and lizards. Their recognizable bill is adapted to catch, reach, or skin their food.
They don't feed their young at all.
All animals feed their young.
Birds do not feed their young on milk. The lyrebird is a bird, so it does not feed its young milk.
Hawks feed their young in the same way that other birds feed their young. They digest the food and spit it into their young's mouth.
Toucans eat a variety of insects. They also eat fruit. Sometimes they even resort to eating young birds, eggs, and lizards.
They eat any small fruit you give them. When you feed them you are supposed to feed them once a day in the day time. When they get full they stop eating.