They eat Fish.
Gharials Mainly Eat Fish. They Will Also Occasionally Eat Unecspecting Waterbirds. Even More Occasionally, They Will Eat Small To Medium Sized Mammals, Other Reptiles And Birds Other Than Waterbirds.
No they are not.
Waterbirds and wading birds such as ducks, moorhens and swamp hens live near ponds.
Bald Eagle: waterbirds, fish, small mammals, carrion (crow), sometimes steals fish from Osprey Golden Eagle: small mammals, grouse, fish, carrion, can kill young sheep, goats, and/or deer
Pigeons do not have webbed feet. This feature is restricted to semi-aquatic birds and waterbirds.
Photographs of the river show that there are waterbirds there who presumably live for the most part on the river.
Penguins do not live in Madagascar. These flightless waterbirds live in the southern half of the world and there are 17 types of penguins.
Dotterels live all over the world, depending on the species. They are waterbirds, so all dotterels tend to be found near bodies of water.
James F. Parnell has written: 'Management of North Carolina's colonial waterbirds' -- subject(s): Water birds, Colonial birds, Conservation, Wildlife conservation, Bird populations, Birds '1983 supplement to Atlas of colonial waterbirds of North Carolina estuaries' -- subject(s): Maps, Nests, Water birds, Colonial birds, Estuarine animals
Richard Kingsford has written: 'Australian waterbirds' -- subject(s): Identification, Pictorial works, Water birds 'Ecology of Desert Rivers'
the Nile affected life by providing fish and waterbirds for food, water to irrigate the crops, papyrus for writing and mud which was full of enrichment for the plants
No, as it would destroy vital fish breeding grounds, especially for migratory eels, and reduce food for migrating and residential waterbirds.