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Page "Black Swan" ¶ 23
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Both and sexes
Both sexes reported that the discussions on sex adjustment within marriage were extremely enlightening.
Both sexes have heavy spiral horns — those of the male are longer and more massive.
Both sexes have those glands, but males have larger morillos and their anal pockets can open more easily.
Both sexes have prominent horn-like structures called ossicones, which are formed from ossified cartilage, covered in skin and fused to the skull at the parietal bones.
Both sexes bore tusks.
Both sexes possess a cloaca, which is connected to a urogenital sac used to store waste before expulsion.
Both sexes may mate with more than one partner during the mating season from mid-January to early March.
Both sexes possess pairs of gonads, opening via a channel called a gonoduct into a common genital opening, the gonopore, which is located on the rear ventral side.
Both sexes wear an ' official ' school jersey.
Both sexes have long, narrow muzzles.
Both sexes have an orange belly, although it is paler in females, which is covered in rounded black spots.
Both sexes of this bird sing year round.
Both sexes might wear boots.
Both sexes participate in the incubation, but the female does the majority of incubating during the day and all of it at night.
Both sexes help feed the newly hatched eaglet.
Both sexes carry horns, which grow from the sides of the head, curving upwards.
Both sexes grow antlers, though they are typically larger in males.
Both sexes usually go barefooted.
Both sexes can produce smegma.
Both sexes build the nest, which is a shallow scrape ( or occasionally a platform of mud and vegetation ) lined with vegetation and sometimes a few feathers, and placed within a half-metre ( 18 in ) of the edge of a small pond.
Both sexes are territorial on the breeding grounds, with distinctive threat displays, but are more gregarious during migration and in wintering areas.
Both sexes of this subspecies are darker and greyer than the equivalent merula plumages.
Both sexes often dressed in counter-sexual or androgynous clothing and wore cosmetics such as eyeliner and lipstick, partly derived from earlier punk fashions.
Both sexes have brownish upperparts mottled darker, a buff throat and breast, a pale buff to whitish belly, and a blackish tail with white bases to the outer tail feathers.

Both and incubate
Both males are females will incubate, with the male often incubating at night and, during the day, defending the nest territory during the day while the female incubates.
Both parents will incubate a brood for 23 – 24 days, and the precocial young leave the nest shortly after hatching.
Both parents incubate the eggs ( except in the case of the Bare-cheeked Trogon, where apparently the male takes no part ), with the male taking one long incubation stint a day and the female incubating the rest of the time.
Both birds incubate and guard the young.
Both members of the pair help to build the nest, incubate the eggs ( generally two per clutch ) and feed the hatched young.
Both sexes incubate by day, but only the female at night.
Both birds help to incubate.
Both parents incubate but when the chicks hatch, the male spends more time on foraging for food.
Both parents incubate a clutch of between three and five eggs.
Both sexes incubate for 28 to 30 days.
Both adults incubate the eggs and feed the chicks.
Both sexes incubate in shifts, and after hatching feed the young by partial regurgitation.
Both sexes incubate the eggs, with incubation bouts lasting between one and four hours during the day and one parent incubating through the night.
Both sexes help incubate the egg, and care for the chick.
Both parents incubate for about 4 weeks to one month.
Both sexes incubate in shifts of up to six days.
Both sexes incubate.
Both sexes incubate the clutch for 19 – 21 days.
Both parents incubate and feed the young.
Both parents incubate and feed the young.
Both parents incubate ; the female leaves before the young birds fledge and sometimes before the eggs hatch.
Both parents incubate and feed the young, who leave the nest soon after they hatch and are able to fly within a month.
Both parents incubate the eggs.
Both sexes incubate the eggs, but the female leaves parental care to the male once the eggs have hatched.

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