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if a wren eats half a worm, the worm will quickly grow into a full worm again. But wrens don't appear to ever do that. They always eat them whole.
Wrens love eating worms. But they're very bad at preserving them. Worms regenerate. So, if a wren eats half a worm, the worm will quickly grow into a full worm again. But wrens don't appear to ever do that. They always eat them whole.
At least one species of American starling buries nuts rather like a squirrel when they are plentiful, and returns to eat them in winter.
Wrens just happen to live in an environment where this sort of planning isn't needed.
Quote from: Pseudoscience-is-malarkey on 28/01/2023 10:34:08Wrens love eating worms. But they're very bad at preserving them. Worms regenerate. So, if a wren eats half a worm, the worm will quickly grow into a full worm again. But wrens don't appear to ever do that. They always eat them whole.That's because they haven't got a pair of scissors, I imagine they swallow their food whole? Seabirds swallow large fish whole, and alive! So unlike you and your chopping worms in half to make more worms, wrens have a wriggly worm in their tummy.//www.youtube.com/watch?v=niDVBWViRIE