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Page "Mountain gorilla" ¶ 17
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Males and leave
Males fast during the reproductive season, unwilling to leave their females or territories.
Males leave their natal groups when they mature to find another family group to defend and breed in.
Males leave their mothers ' territories after puberty but females remain, forming social groups consisting of closely related females and their young.
Males leave their mothers ' territories after puberty, but females remain, forming social groups consisting of closely related females and their immature young.
Males often show aggression towards each other, and will partake in ravenous fighting which will leave other males bloodied and otherwise injured.
Males leave their territories during the rutting season, and compete for mates, using their tusks as weapons.
Males and females usually remain in the same family, while ooloi, once mature, leave to join or found new families.
Males leave the group on reaching adolescence, and find a new troop to join.
Males leave their natal groups when they are six years old and stay along the boundary of the social group.
Males leave their mothers when they are two years old and join the bachelor groups.
Males do not disperse from their natal pack, while females will leave at the age of two years, joining another pack should a breeding vacancy occur.
Males spend most of their time within their territory during incubation but sometimes leave the nest unattended for long periods of time.
Males leave the colony soon after hatching, but are drawn to the scent trail left by a column of siafu once it reaches sexual maturity.
Males give these false alarm calls when females leave the nest area during the mating season, and are thus able to disrupt extra-pair copulations.
Males will slowly begin to leave their original group when they reach maturity, usually traveling with a group of other males for a few years before being able to attract females to form a new group.
Males assist in raising the pups, and remain with their pack for life, while the females leave their birth pack at about age two and a half years old to join a pack with no females.
Males on the other hand, usually leave when they become subadults or adults.

Males and when
Males attain sexual maturity at 11 to 13 years of age, when they are approximately long, and females attain maturity at 5 to 8 years old, when they are long.
Males move around more when hunting than do females, which tend to remain nearer to their webs.
Males may forage as far as from shore when water temperatures rise.
Males may bark when threatening other males or during courtship.
Males can also have enlarged cloacal regions when close to breeding due to the spermatophores pressure exertion on the cloacal tissue. The crest and filament become less obvious and may disappear at other times when they become terrestrial.
Males came of age when they could effectively resist the telepathic control of their father.
Males have higher rates of mortality than females because of longer dispersal distances when they are most vulnerable to predators.
Males will make a short high-pitched squeal when hurt and foals will emit a drawn out wail when in distress.
Males in the breeding season have elongated head feathers which form a wispy crest that is fluffed and more prominent when the bird gets excited ; the crest is shorter in winter and the black areas have paler feather edges, which get worn away as well as the black becoming more glossy in the breeding season.
Males also do this when working far off the stock in an open field.
Males may also bark, make a low grunting noise or make a high pitched wolf-like whine when attracting mates during the breeding season, often luring multiple does into their territory.
Males tend to have larger and wider noses than females, and the base of the female nose will often visibly point slightly upwards when compared to a male.
Males of Heteropoda venatoria, one of the huntsman spiders that seems to easily find its way around the world, have recently been found to deliberately make a substrate-borne sound when they detect a chemical ( pheromone ) left by a nearby female of their species.
Males of many species exhibit gregarious mud-puddling behavior when they may imbibe salts from moist soils.
Males often develop bright blue and green colorations, while females tend to be duller in color, except when gravid when they turn a bright orange color.
Males play only a small role in parental care ; they are not involved in nest building or incubation, and only feed the chicks when they are over half grown.
Males will provide food to chicks at several nests within the group, depending on whether they have mated with the female or not-males only provide care when they are likely to be the true fathers of the chicks.
Males switched between the three tactics, being more likely to attend a lek when the copulation rate the previous day was high or when fewer females were available after nesting had started.
Males are usually submissive to females and will listen for reassuring call notes the females make when they are willing to be approached.

Males and they
Males develop calcium deposits that form bumps on their skulls as they age.
Males who consider themselves third sex will sometimes want an emasculation, i. e., they opt to have their penis and / or testicles removed.
Males rarely help raise the young, and only if they live in pairs or in small groups.
Males are considered inferior to females within drow society, and while some males may be respected if they are powerful wizards ( notably exemplified by Gromph Baenre ), they are never allowed to rule.
Males with pathogenic MECP2 mutations usually die within the first 2 years from severe encephalopathy, unless they have an extra X chromosome ( often described as Klinefelter syndrome ), or have somatic mosaicism.
Males are slightly longer than the females ; they grow to about long, with an average of.
Males reach sexual maturity at 3 – 5 weeks ; females can be fertile as early as four weeks and can carry litters before they are adults.
Males are much smaller in size than the females, and they typically possess a specialized abdominal appendage which is used in mating to grasp a female from behind, pry open her carapace, insert a spermatheca, and thus fertilize the eggs.
Males make a clicking " smack " noise out of the side of their mouths as they wander in search of a mate, and females will sometimes repeat the sound in return.
Males and females are hard to distinguish visually, but can be differentiated by the types of loud sounds they emit by manipulating an inflatable neck sac.
Males sing from exposed perches, from where the birds also like to hunt insects on the wing ; occasionally, they venture into fields or gardens for feeding.
Males and females can also perform a grounded display by chasing each other with their wings up and back, much like the way they chase prey.
Males will gain considerable altitude, then perform a power dive ; as they pull up from the dive, the wings make a sudden, low sound that is called " booming ".
Males in eclipse plumage, females and immatures are best recognised by their small size, calls, and the speculum ; they are hard to tell apart from the Green-winged Teal however.
Males typically postponed marriage till they had served in the military for some time and were beginning their political career, around age 25.
Males arrive first and begin the building of the nest, where they display to attract females.
Males examine the colony area in flight and then pick a nest site, which they defend by fighting and by territorial displays.
Males will breed at 600 grams or more, but in captivity are often not bred until they are 800 grams ( 1. 7 lb ), and females will breed in the wild at weights as low as 800 grams, though 1200 grams or more is most common ; in captivity, breeders generally wait until they are no less than 1500 g ( 3. 3 lb ).

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