Wondering if anyone can help me help out a student with some questions about 
American Robins. A high-schooler in Harrisburg, PA photographed a brood this 
summer in her backyard. One morning, she observed a parent feed a seed to a 
older chick (it fledged that day, the last of the brood). A few hours later, 
without the parents having returned, the chick picked up a different, 
lighter-colored seed from the bottom of the nest and swallowed it. After the 
chick fledged, the student took a photo of the empty nest. The PA Department of 
Agriculture was able to identify the seed in the parent's bill as from the 
Fabaceae/legume family and some light-colored seeds at the bottom of the nest 
as a cherry species.

After the first brood fledged, the parents built a new nest on top of the old 
one. She noticed some large, smooth seeds embedded in the fresh lining. She 
didn't request identification of the seeds or follow the second brood.

She would like to know the "whys" of her observations. I looked around 
published accounts and found seed consumption is not atypical for older chicks. 
Any experts know whether it's (un)usual to feed legume seeds in particular? Is 
it possible the chick ingested the cherry pit (most records are of them 
regurgitating them when fed ripe cherries)? And as for the new nest, is the 
most likely explanation that the female regurgitated seeds while building?

Thanks! She did some impressive and careful work, so I'd like to help her out 
with whatever info people may have.

Sincerely,
Irene

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