Parapsittacopes had a unique
beak shape among the Psittacopedidae, which may be compared to extant birds: large nostrils and the curve of the beak resemble that of
swifts and
treeswifts, while the outline of the bill is similar to that of
waxwings. This beak shape indicates that
Parapsittacopes might have eaten fruit and caught insects by flying out from a perch. The resemblance in beak shape to swifts and treeswifts suggest that
Parapsittacopes primarily ate insects. Unlike in modern songbirds and in the Zygodactylidae,
Psittacopes has short legs, which might indicate that it walked on trees on the ground less than songbirds, rather choosing to remain perched on branches. The beak shape of
Psittacopes also provides insight into the disappearance of birds like it and
Psittacopes. These birds had specialised diets and feeding styles, as shown by the variety of beak types they had. This could have made them more vulnerable to
competition, facilitating the replacement of this family, one of the first kinds of
neornithean to be small and arboreal. == References ==