Abstract-This study aimed to investigate factors affecting risks to birds from toxic seed treatments under typical field use. Feral pigeons (Columba livia) were exposed for 2 d to fonofos-treated wheat seeds by holding them in pens in plots sown at two depths following standard husbandry in winter sowings in English fenland. In the shallow plots, seeds were readily available to pigeons on the soil surface (8.20 seeds/0.25 m 2 ) while in the deep plots little seed was left uncovered (0.20 seeds/0.25 m 2 ). Serum butyrylcholinesterase analysis revealed negligible exposure to fonofos of birds from deep plots but significant exposure of those in shallow plots. Data on body weight and the availability of exposed seed showed that pigeons in the shallow plots stopped eating treated seeds without depleting those exposed on the soil even though the seed consumed was less than 26% of birds' daily food requirements. Neither mortality nor signs of poisoning were observed. Though seeds were treated at the approved rate (1,080 mg a.i./kg seed), fonofos concentration in seeds from the hopper (586.5 mg/kg) and from plots during testing (260.2 and 201.7 mg/kg for days ϩ1 and ϩ2 after sowing, respectively) was substantially lower. In this experiment, the avoidance of fonofos-treated seeds together with the low concentration of fonofos in seeds prevented pigeons from ingesting a lethal dose. In the wild, however, pigeons are poisoned occasionally by fonofos, and it has yet to be determined under what conditions this occurs.