Cardinal
Birds with strong cone-shaped beaks can crack open seeds and nuts to eat them.
Many birds are able to crack seeds with their bills. The sparrow, finch, grosbeak and cardinal crack seeds with their bills.
There are quite a few. Greenfinches, toucans, parrots and (obviously) nutcrackers come to mind.
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.
cavalry seeds also called Bird seeds
Bird seeds are simply the mixed seeds of many plants, gathered and sold commercially. No one actually invented bird seeds as the seeds occur naturally in the wild.
The bird with a twisted bill in New Zealand is the Kakapo, also known as the Night Parrot. This unique bill helps the Kakapo to feed on native plants and seeds. It is a critically endangered species with only a few hundred individuals left in the wild.
To spread seeds. They crack open seed pods and fruit, and some plants cannot germinate until they have been through a bird's digestive system and deposited in their faeces.
good seeds.
They like insects and seeds
Bill Bird died in 1963.
Bill Bird was born in 1888.