What do sparrows eat?

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Everyone knows sparrows, the little brown-black birds that can be found everywhere people live. What do the little sparrows eat?

A male sparrow, recognizable by the black patch on the chest
A male sparrow, recognizable by the black patch on the chest

Sparrows - followers of human culture

  • The sparrow belongs to the passerine birds and is also called house sparrows.
  • He is approx. 15 cm long and weighs around 30 grams. Its plumage is mainly brownish in color. The males also have a black throat patch and breast flap and an ash-gray crown.
  • The sparrows are not great singers. In addition to its typical chirping, the sparrow has a few other tones, but above all warning calls in store. He can also learn "foreign languages" and imitates blackbirds and starlings.
  • He can be found wherever there is food and shelter for him.

Sparrows like to eat what humans leave behind

  • The sparrow is omnivorous. He eats mainly vegetarian, i.e. seeds, buds, Herbs and grains. But since he is not shy at all, he dares to get close to people and "prey" crumbs and other rubbish.

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  • Sparrows need during the breeding season insects, Larvae and aphids. The sparrows eat this very protein-rich food in order to grow up.

  • In winter the birds need a third more food than in the rest of the year.

Why have sparrows become rare?

  • Today the house sparrow is rarely seen in certain areas. This has to do with the current building and the fact that the bird can no longer eat.
  • Sparrows need facades and roofs with niches and crevices for breeding. In order to find food, a certain amount of wild growth is required. In parks with English race and meticulously tidy gardens, birds find nothing to eat.
  • In rural villages and z. B. the sparrow can still be found more often in Berlin. You can hardly find it in very modern, tidy cities like Hamburg and Munich.

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