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Seagull eating waterbird babies in a compilation of attack images seen in a wild animals urb habitat

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Wildirishswan

A seagull that eats baby birds eats waterbird babies for its daily food intake of animal meat. The seagull is successfully dining on the waterbird babies right through the waterbird breeding season from the start of spring and to the end of the summer months, and eating a baby waterbird regularly throughout these seasons is an essential part of the gull's complex and varied diet. The gull is the Lesser Blackbacked gull, and this predatory species of marine birds will feed on many aquatic birds. These gulls will hunt and eat bird babies, fledglings, hatchlings, nestlings, and ducklings, and they are provided like this regularly throughout the waterfowl and waterbird breeding seasons. Gulls are seabirds, also known as seagulls. They are predatory flying birds and opportunistic meateating predators that hunt and eat various animals on or around the water. Still, they will also eat grains, nuts and seeds, and fruits if the opportunity arises. Gulls have a fantastic instinct to attack and eat other animals. This feeding behaviour has evolved over millions of years, enabling them to have an extensive menu of wild proteinrich animal meat. Gulls will hunt and eat smaller birds and bird babies of many species, including aquatic birds, waterbirds, waterfowl, and any avian species that they can deal with and access; they will attack and take hatchlings, nestlings, and birds' eggs by raiding nests regularly throughout the bird breeding seasons. Food eaten without chewing is how the gull and all birds eat their food because they have no teeth for crushing, and dining on big or small portions by swallowing in gulps is how they feed. The gull uses its beak to catch animals when it dines and eats; it is also a tool for breaking open items and tearing up things to eat. The gulls are avians living and breeding in almost every habitat close to water throughout the world's coastal and inland waterways.

posted by trackedb5