Finches have strong beaks for cracking seed cases and nutshells.
A parrot has a strong curved beak, specifically designed for cracking hard nuts and seeds.
they have a curved or a hook shaped beak they use it for cracking nuts ,seeds and also for climbing
small parrots eat with there beak they take a seed and break it with the tip of there beak then the husk of the seed falls out of the sides of there beak big parrots take the food with there beak and then put it into there foot then they put there foot up to there beak and eat it like we do
The beak could assist the bird with cracking open nuts,or attacking competitors.
A sparrow has a multipurpose short hard and round beak. This is used for eating, digging insects, and cracking seeds
The variation in the bills of birds is enormous and fascinating. They are usually adapted to suit the diet of the bird. For instance, an insect eater has a long thin beak, a seed eater has a strong. short one for cracking the seeds. A bird of prey often has a hooked beak to tear meat.
If you mean a "lori" which is simply short for "lorikeet", the bird has a strong, curved beak which is suitable for cracking nuts and hard seeds, on which it likes to feed.
go to the vet. it might have PBFD (Psittacine Beak and Feather Disease, if you have a parrot of some sort)
A peacock's beak is small, hard, and horny for cracking seeds and grains. The color of the strange bird's beak depends on its species. The most common colored beak for a peacock is dark bluish-grey. I hope this helped!
The beak could assist the bird with cracking open nuts,or attacking competitors.
well the beak of a finch is short and broad and their beak makes it hard for them to collect nectar