I think you are referring to a White-Throated Kingfisher bird. If I'm not right, then sorry.
it is a pyaton
I think it's a orb weaver. Harmless.
That would be your red bellied woodpecker :)
Thrashers, particularly the Brown Thrasher, are primarily brown with streaks of lighter colors on their underparts. Their back is a warm, rich brown, while their belly is lighter with darker streaks, providing excellent camouflage in their natural habitat. They also have a long, curved tail and bright yellow eyes, which add to their distinctive appearance. Overall, their coloration helps them blend in with the environment, especially in dense brush and undergrowth.
You can destroy it or put it back where it came from. Since house sparrows are not native they are excluded by the migratory bird act.
With a bright orange-red breast, brown back and dumpy shape, robins are familiar garden birds.
A deers fur can change or be different. A fawn or young deer has tan fur on its belly and brown with white spots on its side and back. A full grown doe has pretty much tan fur all over. A full grown buck has a tan-ish belly with a darker shade of brown on its side and back.
there is 7 different colours in a wilsons bird of paradise 1.black belly and tail 2.bright blue forehead 3.orange back 4.dark blue legs 5.brown feathers bellow his back 6.yellow neck 7.different coloured dark blue beak
Banana
most spiders are not venomous, the only spiders that are dangerous are the Northern or Southern Black widow(bright red marking on belly). Very rarely you might see a brown recluse spider (it looks like a little violin is drawn on its back)
Robins are small birds with a distinctive red or reddish-orange breast. They have a grayish-brown back, white belly, and a relatively long, thin beak. Their eyes are usually dark and they have a white eye ring.
The bird with a blue back and a white belly is likely a blue jay.