they only try to knock other eggs/hatchlings out for the first 3 days. so they would have to hatch at around the same time. otherwise, though, that would be pretty fun to see! 😄
Humans have interfered with nature enough. Unless they are pests in your own residence, which they won't be, it's best to leave it alone. People tend to try and help in the moment without realizing the overall impact they are having on nature as a whole. Like helping baby sea turles get to the ocean. Not as helpful as you think.
@@Trinigmatic In the other hand, we humans are also part of nature... if an animal helps another one out, we're fascinated by that, however somehow the idea of us humans helping out is met with a reaction as if we would be disturbing and destroying nature... With the same logic, every other animal (like dolphins who like to help other animals in distress out) are also disturbing and destroying nature!
I think it was mentioned somewhere that when they don't have their feathers yet, their back is really sensitive and triggers a natural behavior of pushing stuff with their back. That would explain why they would just push everything. And as the feathers grow this behavior would disappear.
I think that is it there's videos of cockoo chicks sharing box nests with other chicks because the deep box style neat prevents them pushing other babies out pushing them is instinct
I think the surviving chick is too old to get pushed out. The Coocoo will be starved but might survive along with the correct chick the nest was made for.
Due piccini nel nido. Uno è nato prima l'altro era appena nato. La mamma non c'era erano soli . Stavano giocando. Erano molto teneri. Marina buona giornata a presto