🧵 View Thread
🧵 Thread (14 tweets)

For those worried about if the humans didn't help, I think the babies would have survived;Duckies are tough: https://t.co/Fu0ZkcpaQN https://t.co/1NupDvr25C

Also, imprinting is really cool."that's alright, the duckling thought he could eat his mum too" https://t.co/7aHUu9mRse

Also, because it's the weekend"The wierd satisfacation watching a bird rise is butt in the air and poop."https://t.co/ETkJQGKshO

Bird poo-trickshttps://t.co/RyHWHEWjzR

I wonder if it's the same phenomenahttps://t.co/ovYFDCw0Gl

I'M NOT CRAZY! He mumbles to himself while reviewing literature on fecal sac behavior of birds.https://t.co/EIFQITDFue

So theoretically birds that don't regurgitate need diff way of sharing gut microbiomes, or behavior to create own?https://t.co/RHwfMdZXBO

Oh, this is sad. Albatross create something like to "owl pellets" as chicks... but it's full of plastic these days.https://t.co/PX5ESrM0t6

Moments later, he had realized that it might have been a mistake to search for that... https://t.co/kKAmIrWpi2


The "chad" of birds; is so dominate it literally forces other birds to vomit for them.https://t.co/YltBsmcwUp https://t.co/MjMhU8USnu


Google, I know I was looking for bird sacs, but that's not what I meant.https://t.co/VLuNq8Ias7

Huh, Reddit had a paper on economics of fecal sac transport; arguing it wasn't about eating the sac for nutrients.https://t.co/aD3Uv5aeQe https://t.co/FKRyu6m30B


irony: the actual Reddit post's title suggest's no one read the paper: https://t.co/MuRiL12oJI 🤦♂️