Indain Robin INDAIN ROBIN MAKE THEIR IN BETWEEN
Indain Robin INDAIN ROBIN MAKE THEIR IN BETWEEN THE STONES
KOEL DOES NOT MAKE THEIR OWN NEST. IT LAYS ITS EGGS IN CROW ‘S NEST
DOVE THE DOVE MAKES ITS NEST AMONG THE THORNS OF A CACTUS PLANT OR A MEHENDI HEDGE.
CROW THE CROW BUILD ITS NEST HIGH UP ON A TREE.
SPRROW IT MAKES ITS NEST IN OR AROUND OUR HOUSE
PIGEON IT MAKE THEIR NEST IN OLD OR DESERTED BULDINGS
COPPER SMITH BARBET MAKES ITS NEST IN A HOLE IN A TREE TRUNK
SUNBIRD MAKES A NEST THAT HANGS FROM THE BRANCH OF A SMALL TREE OR A BUSH.
TAILOR BIRD IT USES ITS SHARP BEAK TO STITCH TOGETHER TWO LEAVES ON A BUSH . IT LAYS ITS EGGS IN THE FOLD OF THE LEAF THAT IT HAS MADE.
BIRDS LAY THEIR EGGS IN THE NEST
Hatching eggs In some of the nest, the eggs hatched
Mother bird feeding their babies
Drilling Holes The hard beak of a woodpecker is good for drilling holes
Birds with short thin beaks usually eat insects.
Cracking seeds A thick short, or conical beak is good for cracking seeds. Buntings, Cardinals, Grosbeaks, Towhees, Finches. . .
Parrots have a different kind of conical bill good for Cracking seeds.
Scooping A Pelican's pouch is use to scoop fish. When the fish is caught the pouch contracts to squeeze out water.
Birds such as Thrashers and Wrens, with slender curved bills can probe for insects.
Straight slender bills are very versatile. Large birds like crows are often omnivorous. Small birds will feed largely on insects. Blackbirds, Bluebirds, Chickadees, Crows, Grackles, Jays, Magpies, Mockingbirds, Meadowlarks, Orioles, Robins, Thrushes,
Humming birds have long thin beaks for getting nectar from flowers.
Birds such as ducks use their webbed feet to swim and their flat beak to filter food from water
A broad flat bill such as that of Flycatchers, Shrikes or Waxwings is good for catching flying insects.
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