"Some of them had stopped to try to help the birds and they were upset."
She said some of the residents were under the impression the Auckland Council had given permission for local businesses to poison the birds, but a council spokesman said this was not the case.
Council spokesman Nigel Horrocks said the poisonings were "news to us".
"Until we know what the story is, it's very difficult to know whose responsibility it is or whether it's a criminal offence or whether it's a council offence."
Businesses in the area denied any knowledge of what had happened.
Sylvia Durrant from the SPCA's Birdwing in nearby Rothesay Bay said the poisonings had been going on for a couple of weeks. On Saturday night 10 sparrows were brought into her.
"When sparrows become a nuisance and get into food and stuff, eventually someone gets sick of them and decides to get rid of them."
She believed people used a chemical called alpha chloralose, often used by pest controllers.
"This goes on all the time, but somebody's been very insistent down in Browns Bay."
If anyone found birds "acting dopey" they could take them home, give them water and keep them warm in a box or cage.