Nesting birds typically eat throughout the day, primarily during the early morning and late afternoon when food is more abundant and predators are less active. They forage for insects, seeds, and other food sources to feed themselves and their chicks. The timing can vary based on the species, availability of food, and environmental conditions. Additionally, adult birds may prioritize feeding their young during peak feeding times to ensure optimal growth.
No. Most birds use sticks as nesting material, not to eat.
Nesting birds eat all different kinds of food. They will eat sunflower seeds, cracked corn, millet, suet cakes, and nyjer seeds.
Foxes will eat any bird they can catch but this is usually limited to ground nesting birds.
This is when spring starts and birds start their nesting.
Some birds do such as the robin but others do not.
Tornadoes can destroy the trees that birds use for nesting, and can potentially kill birds that get swept into the vortex. This has actually cause some concern an a few occasions when tornadoes have threatened the nesting sites of endangered birds.
no
David Anthony Swanson has written: 'Nesting ecology and nesting habitat requirements of Ohio's grassland-nesting birds' -- subject(s): Wildlife management, Wildlife habitat improvement, Birds, Habitat
Mostly small game. Rabbits, squirrels, the occasional untended small pet.They do like a chicken when they can get one. Eggs from ground nesting birds.
A flock or rookery if they are nesting
he stumbled on their nesting ground
Places where birds build nests.