If it is a wild parrot, yes. If it is a parrot that you have purchased from a breeder, I would feed it only indoor bird quality food. Wild Bird food often has been grown as a crop using insecticides and fertilizers (unless clearly marked organic). If you have a companion bird, optimum care would lengthen and preserve the birds' lifespan, so organic or human consumption food is encouraged.
Yes, crows do consume bird seed as part of their diet.
Crows do enjoy eating bird seed as part of their diet, along with other foods like insects, fruits, and small animals.
No, robins typically do not eat bird seed as part of their diet. They primarily feed on insects, worms, and fruits.
Yes, robins primarily eat insects, worms, and fruits as part of their diet. They may occasionally eat bird food like seeds or suet, but it is not a significant part of their diet.
Yes, voles do not typically eat bird seed as part of their diet. Voles are herbivores that primarily feed on plants, roots, and grasses.
Mosquito and parakeet are both nouns.
Since you eat it on small amount, it can be part of a diet, as it gives you pleasure.
Yes, parakeets can eat walnuts.Make sure they are unsalted walnuts though, because salt is not part of a parakeet's natural diet and can be harmful.
It depends on their species.The term "parakeet" is used to describe a medium-sized parrot. A "parakeet" itself is not a species.Some parakeet species are:Alexandrine ParakeetBudgerigarsDerbyan ParakeetEastern RosellaIndian Ringneck ParakeetPlum-headed ParakeetQuaker ParakeetRegent ParakeetAnd many more. In general, many species of parakeet do enjoy nectar and eat it as part of their diet in the wild. However other species are indifferent and will either like it or hate it.If you'd like to know the answer for a specific species of parakeet, please re-ask the question.
In their lower part of the body
I do not know about Texas, but we do have small birds in N.California who are practically striping the leaves off of my sunflowers just leaving a skeleton of veins. I have not found a way yet to keep them away.
If your parakeet has sticky, but dried head feathers he could have an Trichomonas infection. This type of an infection is caused by a protozoal organism and produces heavy mucus which the bird will spit up. When it is flung around from its mouth, it will stick to the feathers and when it dries it feels just like someone had put hair styling gel in the feathers. The treatment for this type infection is Ronex or Ronivet - S or any medication that contains Ronidazole.