Birds use there beaks for many things. Some of the purposes of a birds beak are eating, cracking, prying, feeding there young, building, self defense, and more.
parrot
The platypus does not have a beak. It has a bill.The platypus's bill is covered with thousands of tiny electroreceptor cells, which enable it to detect the electrical impulses of tiny water-dwelling creatures. Once detected, the platypus then uses its bill to shovel the mud and get to the creatures, which form its main food source.
dude why dont you know it?
sea turtles have a beak, kinda like parrots and birds, it uses the beak to bite coral underwater, then it just munches it up and excretes later hope it helped!
Small, sharp, hooked beaks like a parrot or parakeet.
The Platypus has a soft bill which contains electroreceptors. It uses these electroreceptors to detect prey. The mouth area of a cetacean (whale, dolphin, or porpoise) is called the beak (beak and bill are synonyms for birds), but this is not truly a bill.
"Hush your beak" is an idiomatic expression that means to be quiet or stop talking. It often implies that someone should refrain from speaking or expressing their opinions, usually in a light-hearted or playful manner. The phrase uses "beak" as a metaphor for a person's mouth, drawing on the imagery of birds.
Turtles have beaks instead of teeth. If they are carnivorous they have a sharper beak. if they are herbivores they have blunt beaks.
Well it's because an owl's beak is useless... A cardinals' beak is useful,it really uses it.
It uses its spear-like bill/beak. And i assume it has claws on its feet... All birds flap their wings and ruffle their feathers to confuse their prey.
a falcon's beak helps it tear apart prey. While in flight the beak uses a special (small) cone in the nostril that protrudes to breath. ( helps it breathe) this cone also helps them in their top speeds. (200 miles per hour)
A Woodpecker uses it's beak to break threw wood to get the insects thst are inside. No beak; no food