Can anyone solve this riddle?

Zabuza Momochi

New member
Hey there!

I have this riddle that has been bugging me for quite a while now.
So I wonder if you could possibly solve it.
Unfortunately I don't know the answer, so it's up to you to try and solve it.
First one to give a feasible answer will get Best Answer.

RIDDLE!

There are 2 identical trees in a field. On the trees, there are a number of birds (species/gender does not matter). On Tree A, there are 'n' amount of birds. On Tree B, there are 'n' amount of birds.

There are 2 separate events that happen independently from the (beginning) original state...
If a bird moves from Tree A to Tree B, the number of birds on Tree B will be double the number of birds on Tree A.

If a bird moves from Tree B to Tree A, the number of birds on Tree A will be the SAME as the number of birds on Tree B.

In the (beginning) original state, how many birds are on
a) Tree A
b) Tree B

Good luck.
**Hint. You can solve this with algebra.
 
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