Let me carefully examine the image to determine what food each bird eats, based on beak shape and typical feeding behavior.
I’ll go row by row:
1.
Top bird (hawk/eagle-like): Sharp, hooked beak → eats meat. The food options are: seeds, mouse, beetle. It would eat the
mouse (a small animal).
2.
Second bird (kingfisher-like): Long, pointed beak → catches insects/fish. Options: caterpillar, nuts/seeds, hibiscus flower. A caterpillar is an insect — fits best. So
caterpillar.
3.
Third bird (crow/raven): Strong, generalist beak. Options: seeds, hibiscus flower, small black berries (looks like tiny seeds/berries). Crows eat seeds and berries — the black cluster looks like berries or small seeds. But also, crows eat insects and carrion — but here only seeds, flower, and berry-like cluster are shown. The berry-like cluster is most likely what it eats (e.g., wild berries or small fruits). However, looking again: the third row foods are: 3 items — seeds (same as top row), pink hibiscus flower, and a cluster of black dots (likely berries or insect eggs? but more likely berries). Crows do eat berries. So I’ll go with the
black berry cluster.
Wait — let’s double-check all rows precisely using zoom to confirm food types.
I will zoom in on each row to clearly identify the food items and match them correctly.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of bird adaptations worksheet.