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  2. A vet reveals what not to feed wild birds (some of ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/vet-reveals-not-feed-wild...

    Home & Garden. Medicare. News

  3. Bird food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_food

    Commercial bird food is widely available for feeding wild and domesticated birds, in the forms of both seed combinations and pellets. [9] [10]When feeding wild birds, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) [11] suggests that it be done year-round, with different mixes of nutrients being offered each season.

  4. Utz Brands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utz_Brands

    Utz manufactures a wide variety of potato chips and pretzels – 1,000,000 pounds (450,000 kg) of potato chips and 900,000 pounds (410,000 kg) of pretzels every week. Utz also produces cheese curls, sunflower chips, tortilla chips, popcorn, pork rinds, and party mix. Specialty items include chocolate-covered pretzels, seasonal pretzel barrels ...

  5. Dakota Style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dakota_Style

    Dakota Style is a snack food company (Dakota Style Chips, Inc.) and brand of snack foods produced by that company. It operates out of Clark, South Dakota.The brand's flagship product remains the original Industrial Strength kettle cooked potato chips, though Dakota Style now produces other snack foods as well, including jumbo sunflower seeds, sunflower kernels, and flavored popcorn.

  6. Pellet (ornithology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pellet_(ornithology)

    Pellets from a long-eared owl. The alimentary canal of a bird. Long-eared owl pellets and rodent bones obtained from dissected pellets (1 bar = 1 cm). A pellet, in ornithology, is the mass of undigested parts of a bird's food that some bird species occasionally regurgitate.

  7. Sunflower seed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunflower_seed

    Striped sunflower seeds are primarily eaten as a snack food; as a result, they may be called confectionery sunflower seeds. The term "sunflower seed" is a misnomer when applied to the seed in its pericarp (hull). Botanically speaking, it is a cypsela. [1] When dehulled, the edible remainder is called the sunflower kernel or heart.