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DID YOU EVER WONDER WHY SO MANY BIRD BEAKS?

DID YOU EVER WONDER WHY SO MANY BIRD BEAKS?. Do people have a variety of mouths or teeth for eating? Why or why not?. Cracker Style. Seed eaters like sparrows and cardinals have a short, thick cone-shaped beak (bill) for cracking seeds. Shredder Type.

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DID YOU EVER WONDER WHY SO MANY BIRD BEAKS?

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  1. DID YOU EVER WONDER WHY SO MANY BIRD BEAKS? Do people have a variety of mouths or teeth for eating? Why or why not?

  2. Cracker Style Seed eaters like sparrows and cardinals have a short, thick cone-shaped beak (bill) for cracking seeds.

  3. Shredder Type Birds of prey like hawks and owls have a sharp, curved bill for tearing meat (prey)

  4. Chisel Type • Woodpeckers have bills that are long and chisel-like for holing (boring) into wood to eat insects.

  5. Probe Stlye • Hummingbirds bills are long and slender for probing flowers for nectar.

  6. Strainer type • Some ducks have a long, flat beak that strains small plants and animals from the water.

  7. Strainer (cont’d) • Along the inside of the beak they have tiny rows of plates called lamellae like a whale's baleen. These let them filter water out of the side of their beaks and keep food inside.

  8. Spear Type • Birds like heron and kingfish have spear-like beaks adapted for fishing

  9. Tweezer Type • Insect eaters like warblers have a thin pointed beak.

  10. Swiss Army Knife • Crows have a multi-purpose beak that allows them to eat fruit, seeds, insects, fish, and other animals.

  11. Beaks At A Glance

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