ChatterBank1 min ago
Birds hit by cars
7 Answers
My husband heard a question on the radio a few days ago - why do birds sit in the road until the last minute, risking being hit by a car? He didn't hear the answer and wants to know.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thank you all for your answers. I wondered if it was a seasonal thing as they don't do it all the time. I imagined that they are slow after the night spent roosting in trees and they're on the ground first thing looking for their breakfast. When a car comes their muscles aren't warmed up enough to move fast. That's just my theory!
An interesting theory patsyquinn, but birds don't need to warm up in the morning. They are homeothermic and have a constant body temperature of around 39c. to 40c.
Their binocular field of vision is mostly limited to about half of humans but in that view they can see better than us, although there are exceptions.
When feeding, their binocular vision is aimed at the ground and, although they can see a car coming in their periphiral vision, they don't realise how fast it goes.
Road-wise birds are rarely hit unless it is windy.
Their binocular field of vision is mostly limited to about half of humans but in that view they can see better than us, although there are exceptions.
When feeding, their binocular vision is aimed at the ground and, although they can see a car coming in their periphiral vision, they don't realise how fast it goes.
Road-wise birds are rarely hit unless it is windy.