Parrots don't chew. They simply swallow. They bite off small amounts of food and Gulp! down the hatch. The next station is the crop, and the food can sit there for a bit, and then it goes to the stomach. Be warned, however, that pigeons and doves don't have this remarkable feature.
A hawk has a beak and therefore can not chew food, to chew food you need teeth to chew with.
seahorses do not chew their food because they do not have teeth
No they do not, they swallow their food whole.
saliva squrited in your mouth when you chew.
It is recommended that humans chew their food thoroughly.
Happen to the food is melted the food and it soft that soften the food answer 1.melted 2.soften 3.chew and chew the food become small.
Its not exactly what they eat... it more what they chew and gnaw on. Most parrots will chew on wood, and other destructible materials. Parrots in general will do alot of chewing to keep the beak in good order. Hard woods are best and most durable for chew toys, but basically they need somewhat easy to tear up materials, like soft woods that are fun to destruct, and then harder woods that are longer lasting and provide hours and hours of chewing pleasure for them. Given the nature of the parrot beak, all of this chewing is not only entertaining to them, but it also keeps the beaks "trimmed" back and sharpened. Captive birds will need to chew, and also have access to concrete perches that offer another type of surface for beak honing. In the wild, parrots would do much the same thing as "domesticated" parrots... chew chew chew... branches, inside cavities in trees they might nest in, things they just decide look like fun to chew on, as a whole, parrots are natures little colorful wrecking crew! Hope this helps a little.
they eat food
they use their teeth to grab their food and they don't chew their food
To chew food, silly!
they dont chew there food they much it up in there mouth