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  2. Human uses of birds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_uses_of_birds

    Human uses of birds have, for thousands of years, included both economic uses such as food, and symbolic uses such as art, music, and religion. In terms of economic uses, birds have been hunted for food since Palaeolithic times. They have been captured and bred as poultry to provide meat and eggs since at least the time of ancient Egypt.

  3. Human uses of animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_uses_of_animals

    Human uses of animals include both practical uses, such as the production of food and clothing, and symbolic uses, such as in art, literature, mythology, and religion. All of these are elements of culture, broadly understood. Animals used in these ways include fish, crustaceans, insects, molluscs, mammals and birds.

  4. Falconry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falconry

    The practice of hunting with a conditioned falconry bird is also called "hawking" or "gamehawking", although the words hawking and hawker have become used so much to refer to petty traveling traders, that the terms "falconer" and "falconry" now apply to most use of trained birds of prey to catch game. However, many contemporary practitioners ...

  5. Read This Essay from “Conversations with Birds,” by Priyanka ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/read-essay-conversations...

    Author Priyanka Kumar's new book, "Conversations with Birds," is a lively collection of essays, drawing inspiration from her childhood in northern India and America. Read This Essay from ...

  6. Animal culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_culture

    In wild songbirds, social networks are a mechanism for information transmission both within and between species. [86] Interspecific networks (i.e. networks including birds of different species) were shown to exist in multispecies flocks containing three different types of tits whose niches overlapped. In this study, knowledge about new feeding ...

  7. Human uses of living things - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_uses_of_living_things

    The human population exploits and depends on many animal and plant species for food, mainly through agriculture, but also by exploiting wild populations, notably of marine fish. [10] [11] [12] Livestock animals are raised for meat across the world; they include (2011) around 1.4 billion cattle, 1.2 billion sheep and 1 billion domestic pigs. [12 ...

  8. Fireworks can cause stress to birds in the wild, study suggests

    www.aol.com/fireworks-cause-stress-birds-wild...

    Fireworks can cause stress to birds in the wild, a study of Greylag geese in Austria suggests. Researchers fitted temporary transmitters to 20 wild Greylag geese at Almsee, a lake in Upper Austria ...

  9. Bird conservation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_conservation

    Birds are also threatened by high rise buildings, communications towers, and other human-related activities and structures; estimates vary from about 3.5 to 975 million birds a year in the North America alone. [18] The largest source of human-related bird death is due to glass windows, which kill 100–900 million birds a year.