I think this is a silly trick, based on the fact that 'orange' is both a fruit and a colour i.e. both a noun and an adjective.
"An orange and black bird" is one thing - it's ONE bird which has both orange-coloured feathers and black-coloured feathers.
"An orange and a black bird" are two things - a fruit and a bird. However, this sentence is quite contrived, as we don't usually say that fruit sits in trees, but rather that it hangs from them.
Another interpretation is that there are two birds - "an orange (bird) and a black bird" - in the second sentence. However, that does not sound natural. We would not normally omit the first 'bird' in this sentence, especially given the ambiguity of the phrase 'an orange'.
If you look carefully, this is actually an exercise on articles - it is only the 'a' before 'black' in the second sentence which tells you that this is a plural subject, and only the lack of article in the first which tells you that it is singular. It's still pretty silly and contrived, though.