These are robust, seed-eating birds with strong bills.
The seeds are also important in the diets of several seed-eating birds.
This is a favored food of finches and many other seed-eating birds.
These gregarious seed-eating birds build their nests in grass, a bush or low tree, and lay four eggs.
Researchers support these suggestions by noting the lack of highly developed nasal apparatus and associated brain functions in seed-eating birds such as pigeons.
There are also large patches of chalk scrub, grazing fields (popular with seed-eating birds) and a dew pond.
They are seed-eating birds with a distinctively finch-like bill.
American sparrows are seed-eating birds with conical bills, brown or gray in color, and many species have distinctive head patterns.
The worst effects are on seed-eating birds, which rely heavily on fields and crops for their food.
Outside the breeding season, it is quite social and frequently seen in flocks with other small seed-eating birds.