Showing posts with label wintering bluebirds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wintering bluebirds. Show all posts

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Ice and Bluebirds--a Special Matter

Eastern Bluebirds are one of the most popular and enjoyable birds to have around your home. They don't mind being near people and their activities, and, like many other birds, they recognize you when you're providing food. Bluebirds that are familiar with you will even fly toward you when you are filling their mealworm feeder.
Our nesting Eastern Bluebirds in Tennessee are non-migratory and remain here year-around. They are joined by birds from neighboring states and young bluebirds from neighboring territories to form small wintering flocks that aid winter survival. These flock members help each other find food, spot predators and provide warmth when they roost together in a sheltered cavity, such as a nest box, when the temperature drops below 20 F degrees.
Bluebirds are not your typical feeder birds, however. Their natural winter diet consists of spiders, berries and fruits. If these foods are available they can maintain fat reserves that sustain them during the extreme cold. T. David Pitts, in his book, Studying Eastern Bluebirds, A Biologist's Report and Reflections,  also says the following:  "As a result of their high rate of metabolism, bluebirds can quickly use the fat they store.  If extremely cold temperatures linger for several days, many bluebirds may die since they normally store only enough fat to protect themelves for a day or so, and they may not be able to find enough food to replace the fat that has been used."
A male Eastern Bluebird feeding on the berries of the burning bush.

Pitts also conducted extensive studies in northwest Tennessee that revealed that bluebirds do not digest the seeds that are in the fruits they eat.   These seeds pass through their system undigested and provide no nutritional benefit.  Herein lies the challenge.  A non-seed eating bird that primarily recognizes insects, spiders and berries as food.  How do you feed them when winter gets rough?
And even more challenging, how do your feed them when larger, territorial birds are chasing them away from the berry sources?
Female Eastern Bluebird, above and below.

I had this challenge over the past week, when freezing rain and sleet coated everything with ice and temperatures plummeted to single digits with windchills below zero.  Suet crumbs froze, mealworms froze and larger birds, such as American Robins and Mockingbirds became aggressive, chasing smaller birds, like bluebirds and Hermit Thrushes away from the berry bushes. In fact, one robin was so territorial he chased bluebirds away from both the holly and the neighboring burning bush.
One male bluebird was familiar with the mealworm feeder guard and could navigate through it and eat suet and mealworms offered there, protected from larger birds.  The other bluebirds that came with him did not know how to navigate the guard.  With feathers fluffed against the cold and mealworms frozen motionless, there was little hope they would learn about the guard in sub-freezing conditions.
After consulting friends, Billie Cantwell and Liz Cutrone at Knoxville's Wildbirds Unlimited, I adjusted a Dinner Bell feeder to exclude larger birds by lowering the dome cover to a few inches above the tray, filled the tray with smooth "butter bark" suet pellets, small home-made suet crumbs and freeze-dried mealworms and hung it near the bluebird feeder.  When the male bluebird came to the feeder, his companions soon discovered the added food source and were also able to eat from it. In their absence, I noticed the Hermit Thrush landing on the dinner bell also to eat suet.

Additional good advice-- spread your suet feeders out so if a larger bird claims one feeder, there is an alternate area for the smaller birds to visit.
In the spring you can also consider planting Sumac near the borders of your yard.  In Pitts' studies in northwest Tennessee, two native species, smooth sumac and winged sumac, were the most favored fruit of bluebirds, composing 50-90% of their winter diet even when a variety of other fruits were available.
Pitts advises to plant more than one sumac spaced apart in different areas of the yard to prevent mockingbird dominance.  If a group of robins or cedar waxwings flies in and takes over the holly berry supply, a protective mockingbird will likely take over the sumac next.  Planting shrubs spaced far apart in different areas will give the bluebirds an alternative choice for feeding.
Northern Mockingbird in holly

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Wintering Bluebirds--the Magic and the Mystery

As I've watched bluebirds visit my mealworm feeder over the past several weeks, I've realized that this opportunity to observe and recognize members of the family that nested in my nest box this past season, is fleeting, and will never happen in quite the same way again.
The mated pair of my nest box bluebird family was not familiar with a mealworm feeder prior to their exposure this past spring.  They did not approach it or show curiosity at the onset, even though the feeder is very close to the nestbox.  Neither, did they have any experience with a human offering mealworms (nor did I).  It was while watching their behavior as they exited the nest box that I noticed that they sometimes paused on the guard and looked down for insects.  This gave me the idea to place the blue dish of meal worms in their direct line of vision as they rested on the nest guard after feeding young.
It was the female who first discovered the mealworms and landed on the dish with excited chirps, and who readily began to associate the blue dish with mealworms where ever it was placed.  This eventually led her to understand and associate the blue dish in the feeder with mealworms.  The male followed her example.  Very quickly, using fine honed flight skills, the male and female flew into the mealworm feeder's guard with precision, flattening their feathers and barely touching the wire guard that serves to keep out larger birds.
Female adult feeding inside the feeder with young bluebird perched on top.

The first brood juveniles were less precise in their landings and entrance, but also became very adapt at entering the feeder and collecting mealworms both for themselves and to feed to the second brood nestlings.  They also were not bothered by my presence, having seen me many times while in the company of their parents.  I could still distinguish them from their parents by behavior.  The male and female adults both often faced me when they landed, sometimes flying to a closer perch when I was present, and stared at me and wing-waved to solicit more mealworms.  Their bond to me as a potential source of food has remained strong due to their exposure throughout their feeding of two nest broods during the summer.  This behavior sets them apart even now.
The younger bird pictured in the top and third images, finds her way into the feeder, above, and stands alert behind the older female, possibly watching for her reaction or waiting her turn.  Below, a second young bird does not attempt to enter the feeder, but teeters on the outer edge to grab home-made suet that has fallen onto the platform.
Having observed these feeding behaviors and able to distinguish the mated pair from the season's offspring even after the first brood youngsters began to molt and lose their juvenile spots,  I have assumed that the bluebirds now visiting the mealworm feeder are the nest box pair and their offspring.  Since the family left the immediate area after the second brood fledged, I have naturally assumed that the birds having difficulty entering the feeder through the guard are the second brood juveniles that had no opportunity to practice.  
Having said that, last night I opened my new and wonderful resource for bluebird information, Studying Eastern Bluebirds, A Biologist's Report and Reflections, by David Pitts, and began to partially unravel some of my assumptions, or at least cast doubt on them.  As always, with animal and bird observations, we try to make sense of what we are seeing based on what we know about a species or about individuals, but there are many variables and possibilities to consider.  
Some of the interesting information that I read about flocking in Pitt's chapter on wintering bluebirds gave me pause, raising questions but not necessarily answering them.  This is not a bad thing, of course.  Unanswered questions cause us to observe more closely and open our minds to many possibilities.
To summarize, Pitt's winter observations of bluebirds he had banded led him to suggest that each wintering bluebird flock usually contained one adult male, one adult female, and two to six young bluebirds that had hatched the previous summer.  The adults were often, but not always, the mated pair in the territory that included their nest box.  The juvenile bluebirds in a winter flock, on the other hand, were usually not the offspring of the adults in that flock.  However, fledglings from a late nest did sometimes remain with their parents into the winter.  (aha!)

That last statement made me chuckle.  Question answered, question unanswered.  Am I seeing the inexperienced second brood juveniles returning to the feeder with their parents?  Or am I seeing young birds from other local families or migrants that have joined this pair's flock for winter survival?  It is certain I will never know the answer, but it is also certain that I am seeing young birds, numbering four to six, accompanying the familiar adult pair to the feeder, and that all of them are better equipped to survive the winter in the company of each other.

In the last three images, above, you are seeing the same young bluebird attempting to enter the feeder. She ultimately did not go inside, choosing to grab morsels of food from the outer rim, instead.  

More observations on wintering bluebirds and flocking behavior in upcoming posts.  

Links and Resources:

Studying Eastern Bluebirds, A Biologist's Report and Reflections by T. David Pitts

Feeding mealworms to bluebirds
My blog posts on my bluebird family
Bluebird art found on my website watercolor gallery and in my online shop.
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For the Love of It...

...the sage sees heaven reflected in Nature as in a mirror, and he pursues this Art, not for the sake of gold or silver, but for the love of the knowledge which it reveals.
Sendivogius (1750)

Your Uncapped Creativity...

Your Uncapped Creativity...
"There is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening that is translated through you into action; and because there is only one of you in all time, this expression is unique. If you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and it will be lost. The world will not have it. You must keep that channel open. It is not for you to determine how good it is, nor how valuable. Nor how it compares with other expressions. It is for you to keep it yours, clearly and directly." ----the great dancer, Martha Graham