After puncturing them with their bill they stick their bill inside the broken egg to remove and eat the contents. My wild pet crow is now almost 4 yrs old . Yes, crows do kill other crows. Last week I watched a crow fly with a large egg (I think it was a mallard duck egg) positioned lengthwise in its bill. How do crows carry eggs? a pelican feeds on ocean fish and crows eat pelicans egg's. Crows fight with each other a lot, both within their family groups and outside of them, though when it’s with family it’s usually not as serious.

He now has a mate and two 9 -10 mo old babies . This means, to anyone looking in: they would suspect crows of staying with the same partner for life. How about that . Cuckoo’s are a classical example of birds who show brood parasitism, i.e. Generally speaking: they are thought to be “socially monogamous” — yes. You might have heard about birds carrying eggs either with their feet or with in their bills. In this case, the nest of a crow. The truth is that crows are fairly unlikely predators--even for your young birds or eggs. How are land and ocean ecosystems connected? Brood parasites are an incredibly interesting group of birds. The Crows eat dove eggs as well as their babies which they kill and eat. Why? His name for me is doot do do doot ! I have to watch out for Crows, Jays, and Ravens ALL the time as they can follow ME to a nest and then eat the eggs or babies after I leave. they lay eggs in the nests of other birds. He used to eat food I gave him on the deck as I read the Cornell university ‘s book so I would learn what they can eat and what is not good to feed them . 2) Do crows ever kill each other? Instead of going to the trouble of building their own nests and raising their own young, they out-source these functions to other birds. I never approach a nest when they are around, and if we are not sure if they are lurking....we do "fake nest checks", checking several bushes, and trees along with the real nest.

Crows are opportunists, if not hunters, and if they see an easy meal, they may take it. They are listed here because occasional reports of predation have been made in connection with the loss of young chicks or eggs.

With crows outside their family they may be fighting to defend mates, food, or territory boundaries.