Want this question answered?
A bird's beak is the same as our hands. Birds use their beaks to pick up things. They use their beaks to eat and drink with. They use their beaks to breathe in and out with. They use their beaks to make noise with.for using it as tools to huntIt depends upon the bird. Some birds use their beaks to gather grain or worms. Some use them to snap up beetles or other insects. Some use them to crush seeds. Some use them to hunt with and kill their prey.
Seed eaters tend to have short, robust beaks. Sparrows, finches, parrots, are just three examples.
Different types of birds eat different things, so the way they eat it varies. Meat-eaters have long hooked beaks they use to tear strips of meat off of their prey. Seed-eaters have shorter, thick, pointed beaks to hull the seeds they eat. Fruit-eaters have medium sized beaks to crush the fruit and get pieces off of it.
Bills or beaks suitable for kinds of food they eat. Some birds like Eagles have hooked beaks to tear the flesh of their prey ; some birds have short,thin beaks to capture insects ; and some birds have short, thick beaks to open seeds. some birds have even long,thin beaks for probing flowers for nectar or searching the soft mud for worms and shellfish.
parrot
Some of them are Fringillidae, Sparrows, Finches, Cardinals, and Grosbeaks.
A bird's beak is evolved for the sort of food the bird eats. For example, birds who eat hard seeds have strong beaks to crack them open. Birds who drink flower nectar have long skinny beaks to fit inside the flowers.
it is sure parrot i have learnt it in class 4 in EVS
Goldfinches use their beaks for eating small seeds like thistle seeds
Well birds may sometimes carry seeds in their mouths (or beaks) and while their flying they drop seeds which causes plants and trees to grow.
Small, sharp, hooked beaks like a parrot or parakeet.
The green fruit is fine for the hens, you may wish to crush them up since they can be too hard for beaks to break through to get at the meat. Do not feed them the leaves or stalks of a tomato plant.