Birds, like mammals, are warm-blooded and come in all shapes and sizes. However, they are covered with feathers and have hollow, porous bones which allow all Wisconsin birds—even the heaviest wild turkey—to fly. They also lay eggs, which they must incubate for a period of several weeks to a month. They tend to be more active during the daylight and therefore are fairly easy to observe. About 400 different kinds of birds have been observed and recorded in Wisconsin. Since birds are very active and have high body temperatures they must keep their internal fires stoked by consuming a lot of food daily. Some consume nearly their body weight in food each day. Many birds eat seeds, some eat fruit. Some insect-eating birds devour about 3,000 insects every 24 hours. Birds of prey consume large quantities of mice, voles and other rodents, large insects, and other birds. Each type of bird has a certain habitat preference. Some tolerate a wide variation in habitat while others are very specific in their habitat needs. For this publication, Wisconsin birds are grouped into several categories with only representative examples listed: Birds of Prey Marsh and Shore Birds Waterfowl Upland Game Birds Migratory Songbirds Resident Birds You can enhance your land for different types of birds. Putting out bird feeders well- stocked with sunflower seeds, thistle seed and suet is one easy way of attracting birds to your property. But don’t forget that they need water and shelter, too. So plan on installing a year-round birdbath and either build or purchase a variety of nest boxes. If you have an old field, pasture, or wet meadow you can enhance it for grassland sparrows, ring-necked pheasant, bobwhite quail, eastern bluebird, and such warblers as yellow warbler or yellowthroat. If you live in the southern part of the state and have a woodland, consider planting oaks to encourage wild turkeys. In mature woodlands, leave snags for hawks, owls, woodpeckers, chickadees and many other cavity nesting songbirds. If you own or border a wetland, consider planting a minimum of 5 acres of dense, permanent grass cover to encourage mallard nesting. Also, be sure to leave snags, old oaks and willows as sources of nesting cavities for woodducks. 14 Wildlife and Your Land Birds Tundra Swan Trumpeter Swan
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Birds - Wisconsin Department of Natural Resourcesdnr.wi.gov/files/PDF/pubs/wm/WM0220_b.pdf · · 2012-02-15porous bones which allow all Wisconsin birds—even the heaviest wild
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Transcript
Birds, like mammals, are warm-blooded andcome in all shapes and sizes. However, theyare covered with feathers and have hollow,porous bones which allow all Wisconsinbirds—even the heaviest wild turkey—to fly.They also lay eggs, which they must incubatefor a period of several weeks to a month. Theytend to be more active during the daylightand therefore are fairly easy to observe.
About 400 different kinds of birds have beenobserved and recorded in Wisconsin. Sincebirds are very active and have high bodytemperatures they must keep their internalfires stoked by consuming a lot of food daily.Some consume nearly their body weight infood each day. Many birds eat seeds, some eatfruit. Some insect-eating birds devour about3,000 insects every 24 hours. Birds of preyconsume large quantities of mice, voles andother rodents, large insects, and other birds.Each type of bird has a certain habitatpreference. Some tolerate a wide variation inhabitat while others are very specific in theirhabitat needs. For this publication, Wisconsin
birds are grouped into several categories withonly representative examples listed:
Birds of PreyMarsh and Shore BirdsWaterfowlUpland Game BirdsMigratory SongbirdsResident Birds
You can enhance your land for different typesof birds. Putting out bird feeders well-stocked with sunflower seeds, thistle seedand suet is one easy way of attracting birdsto your property. But don’t forget that theyneed water and shelter, too. So plan oninstalling a year-round birdbath and eitherbuild or purchase a variety of nest boxes. Ifyou have an old field, pasture, or wetmeadow you can enhance it for grasslandsparrows, ring-necked pheasant, bobwhitequail, eastern bluebird, and such warblers asyellow warbler or yellowthroat. If you live inthe southern part of the state and have awoodland, consider planting oaks toencourage wild turkeys. In maturewoodlands, leave snags for hawks, owls,woodpeckers, chickadees and many othercavity nesting songbirds. If you own orborder a wetland, consider planting aminimum of 5 acres of dense, permanentgrass cover to encourage mallard nesting.Also, be sure to leave snags, old oaks andwillows as sources of nesting cavities forwoodducks.
14 Wildlife and Your Land
Birds
Tundra Swan
Trumpeter Swan
Wildlife and Your Land 15
Bald Eagle
Northern Goshawk
Northern Harrier(formerly Marsh Hawk)
Broad-winged Hawk
Cooper’s Hawk
Red-shouldered Hawk
Suckers, northern pike,muskellunge, bullheads,carp; occasionally geeseand ducks; carrion suchas deer, small livestock,waterfowl, fish duringwinter
Rodents and other smallmammals, amphibians,snakes, birds, insects,fish
Small mammals such asyoung rabbits, redsquirrels, chipmunks,mice, moles, shrews;also snakes, frogs,lizards, small fish,larvae of large mothsand butterflies, beetles,grasshoppers andcrickets, crayfish; huntsfrom perch in woodlandsor while flying overtreetops or openmeadows
Mixed, deciduous andsometimes coniferousforests, or along riveredges in deciduouswoods. Also, pineplantations in southeastWisconsin
Mature river bottomforests and woodedmargins of marshes,often close to cultivatedfields
Roost and nests in largetrees, often white pine.Nest is 4 feet indiameter and 3 feetdeep
Builds stick nest.Prefers large hardwoodtrees 30–40 feet aboveground; frequentlyselects birch, aspen,maple, and beech fornesting trees;occasionally selectsjuniper, pine, spruceand fir. May build ontop of old hawk nest
Nests on the ground intall grasses in ameadow or swamp nearwater
Builds stick nests inbirch, elm, maple,basswood or otherdeciduous trees, pine,hemlock; from 25–90feet above ground;occasionally 3–10 feetabove ground
Builds stick nest with“cup” lined with barkflakes, occasionallyrimmed with green treesprings in main crotchor on a horizontal limb.Nests 20–60 feet aboveground in deciduous orconiferous trees;occasionally uses oldcrow nests or same nestfrom previous year, buttypically builds a newnest in same area
Builds nests of mossytwigs and branches,lined with bark strips,bits of oak leaves andlichens in deciduoustrees averaging 80–95feet tall
Northern one-third inspring and summer;rare in southeast, southcentral and easternWisconsin. Number ofoccupied territories hasincreased from 108 in1973 to 645 in 1997
Northern one-fourth,and south into centralWisconsin
Statewide; uncommonwinter resident south
Statewide, butuncommon summerresident west andcentral. Often seen inlarge numbers duringfall migration
Statewide butuncommon. Watch for itnear birdfeeders inwinter in southern thirdof state
Statewide butuncommon summerresident; uncommonwinter resident south
Birds of Prey Food Habitat Nest Site Distribution
16 Wildlife and Your Land
Red-tailed Hawk
Rough-legged Hawk
Sharp-shinned Hawk
American Kestrel
Osprey
Barred Owl
Great Horned Owl
Eastern Screech Owl
Primarily smallmammals such asrabbits; also birds,reptiles, and someinsects
Primarily smallmammals
Small birds up to pigeonsize; also small mam-mals, reptiles andinsects
Insects such asgrasshoppers, cricketsand beetles; also miceand other smallmammals, birds,lizards, toads, frogs andsmall snakes; huntsfrom a perch or whilehovering over areaswith short grassy cover
Primarily fresh panfish;also frogs, snakes,ducks, crows and smallmammals
Variety of birds, miceand other smallmammals, fish, frogs,salamanders, snakes,crayfish and largeinsects
Rabbit, squirrels,skunk, woodchuck,opossum, gopher, geese,turkey, pheasant, quail,mice, rats, weasels,mink, crow, crayfish,reptiles, amphibians,fish and large insects
Mice and other smallmammals, grass-hoppers, locusts, moths,beetles and otherinsects, spiders, fish,crayfish, salamanders,reptiles, songbirds
Woodland edge invariety of open habitatsincluding pasture, field,meadow and swampyareas
Oak and mixeddeciduous andconiferous forestsbordering lakes, steams,swamps, marshes or wetmeadows
Farm woodlots, openconiferous, deciduous ormixed woods,riverbottom forests,marshes, swamps, largecity parks and orchards
Variety of woodedhabitats, especially openwoods adjacent tomeadows, marshes orfields. Also, orchardsand shade trees intowns and cities
Builds nests of sticks intops of large deciduoustrees, usually 35–90 feetabove ground
Doesn’t nest inWisconsin but nestsprimarily on cliffs alongriver bluffs
Nests primarily inconifers, usually 30–35feet above ground. Nestis a compact platform oftwigs, sometimes linedwith smaller twigs orbark strips
Nests in nest boxes andtree cavities; nest sitesare usually alongstreams, ponds or forestedges, normally 10–35feet above ground
Nest site is near or inwater atop dead orliving trees, powerpoles, old eagle, gull orgreat blue heron nests,artificial nestingstructure; nest site maybe used by same pairyear after year
Nests 18–50 feet aboveground in tree cavities,hollows in top of brokentree stub or nests ofcrows and squirrels
Nests up to 70 feet highin large trees, usually inthe nests of red-tailedhawks, osprey, baldeagles, heron or crow.Sometimes nests in treecavities
Nests 5–35 feet high intree cavities, abandonedwoodpecker holes; alsonests in wood duck nestboxes
Statewide
Statewide in winteronly
Northern half
Statewide
Northern two-thirds insummer
Statewide
Statewide
Statewide, except rarein north
Birds of Prey Food Habitat Nest Site Distribution
Wildlife and Your Land 17
Bald Eagle
Goshawk
Harrier
Broad-wingedHawk
Barred Owl
Great Horned Owl
Screech Owl
Osprey
Cooper’s Hawk
Red-shoulderedHawk
Red-tailed Hawk
Rough-leggedHawk
Sharp-shinned Hawk
Kestrel
18 Wildlife and Your Land
Turkey Vulture
Great Blue HeronSandhill Crane
GreatEgret
BeltedKingfisher
GreaterYellowlegs
PectoralSandpiper
Killdeer
Woodcock
Wildlife and Your Land 19
Turkey Vulture Fresh or decayedcarrion, includingalmost all wild anddomestic animals; frogs,snakes, birds and fish
Hilly, forested regionswith exposed perches.Shaded nest sites oncliffs and in maturetrees
Lays egg directly on theground beneath fallentrees or tumbledboulders, in piles ofdiscarded brush, logsand/or rocks or inabandoned buildings, insmall caves, on rockledges, in hollow logsand in large hollowtrees. Nearly every siteis isolated fromdisturbance by people
Statewide
Birds of Prey Food Habitat Nest Site Distribution
Sandhill Crane
Great Egret
Great Blue Heron
Belted Kingfisher
Sandpipers, Plovers andother shorebirds(Pectoral and SpottedSandpipers, Greaterand Lesser Yellowlegs,Piping and Semi-palmated Plovers,Killdeer, Sanderling)
American Woodcock
Mice, frogs, insects,roots, shoots of grains,grasses, seeds
Fish, insects, frogs,crayfish, salamanders,snakes, snails and smallmammals
Acorns, nuts, water lilyseeds, beetles, bugs,spiders
Aquatic plants, insects,crayfish, small fish,mollusks, grasses andsedges
Submerged leaves,seeds and stems ofaquatic plants such assago pondweed, wildcelery, algae, and wildrice
Submerged leaves, seedsand stems of aquaticplants such as sagopondweed, wild celery,algae, and wild rice
Aquatic plants, insects,crayfish, small fish andmollusks
Fish
Farmlands, lakes,rivers, marshes;frequent urban areas,especially parks and golfcourses
Wetlands, shallow,weed-filled waters
Wetlands in farmland
Marshes, ponds, riversand farmlands
Forested wetlands
Most prefer larger lakesand rivers; a few prefersmall lakes, ponds andsloughs; rarely come toland
Open waters of lakesand rivers
Open water of lakesnear woodlands
Large, open water lakesand rivers
Wooded lakes andstreams, large riverssuch as Mississippi
Builds nest of grassesand feathers on groundin marshy areas. Note:Can be a nuisance inagricultural and urbanareas
Do not commonly nestin Wisconsin, but needprotection of marshvegetation and shallow,open water
Nests in short grassaround edges ofwetlands, especially inungrazed fields,semipermanent shallowpotholes surrounded byhayfields or grasslands
Nests primarily inupland grasses, yet canbe found nesting incattails
Nests in old woodpeckerholes in old trees or inwood duck nest boxesset 15 feet aboveground, over water
Many diving ducks donot nest in Wisconsin
Nests primarily inprairies and parklandsof the U.S. and Canada;migrates throughWisconsin in spring andfall; winters in lakes,coastal bays and inlandmarshes along theAtlantic and Gulf ofMexico
Nests on the ground bywater in clumps of tallplants in shallow water
Doesn’t nest inWisconsin, mostabundant in spring andfall migration
Common and Hoodedmergansers nest in treecavities; Red-breastednests on the ground
Upland Game Birds Food Habitat Shelter Distribution
24 Wildlife and Your Land
Northern Oriole(Formerly Baltimore
Oriole)
Red-winged Blackbird
Eastern Bluebird
Bobolink
Indigo Bunting
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Blackberries,blueberries,elderberries, grapes,pears, peas,caterpillars, ants,beetles, spiders,grasshoppers, bugs,wasps; at feeders:orange halves, smalltrays of grape jelly,mealworms, brokenwalnuts, apple slices,suet and bread
Hayfields, opengrasslands, old fields,pastures, sedge andgrass meadows
Forest edges, openbrushy fields, roadsidethickets
Deciduous or mixedsecond-growth woods,swamp and streamborders, old orchards,suburban trees, edges ofwoods and pastures
Weaves an intricatepouch-like nest, whichhangs pendulously25–30 feet at the tip ofbranches of elm,cottonwood, birch,boxelder, aspen, oak,maples, willows or appletrees; Nest is built withmilkweed down, doghairs, weed fibers, wooland yarn or any otherfibrous material
Weaves nest in cattails,rushes, sedges, reeds orbushes, near or overwater, usually no morethan 3 feet aboveground
Builds nest in bluebirdnest boxes, rottenfenceposts, natural treecavities, old woodpeckerholes; most attempt tore-nest and produce asecond brood
Builds nests in a slightnatural hollow or scrapein the ground in densestands of alfalfa, clover,timothy, or weeds
Builds a cup of driedgrasses and plant fibers1–12 feet above groundin crotch of a bush,shrub or low tree, or ina tangle of berry vines
Builds a flimsy nest ofsmall twigs, weed stemsand plant rootlets in thefork of a deciduous treeor shrub at 4–15 feetabove ground
Statewide
Statewide
Statewide, butuncommon south andeast
Statewide
Statewide
Statewide
Migratory Songbirds Food Habitat Nest Sites Distribution
Wildlife and Your Land 25
Eastern Bluebird
Red-winged Blackbird
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Indigo Bunting
BaltimoreOriole
Bobolink
26 Wildlife and Your Land
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Eastern Meadowlark
Dark-eyed Junco
Purple Martin
Wildlife and Your Land 27
Ruby-throatedHummingbird
Dark-eyed Junco
Purple Martin
Eastern MeadowlarkWestern Meadowlark
Flower nectar and pollenfrom: cardinal flower,columbine, coralberry,buckeye, scarlet runnerbeans, bee balm(monarda), eveningprimrose, gladiolus,hibiscus, honeysuckle,lilies, butterfly weeds,morning glory,nasturtium, petunia,phlox, snapdragon,thistle, trumpet creeper,weigela, zinnia, hosta,coral bells; hummingbirdfeeders filled with red-colored sugar water;very small insectsattracted to nectar andsometimes flying insectsattracted to uneatenprey at hawk nests
At feeder: black oilsunflower seeds, whiteproso millet, crackedcorn, corn, grainsorghum, peanuts,peanut butter, oldbakery goods such aswheat or corn bread andpie crusts, brokenwalnuts, wheat,oatmeal, pumpkinseeds; In the wild:amaranth, crabgrass,barnyard grass, bristlegrass, canary grass,dropseed, goosefoot,wild hemp, oats,petunia, ragweed,switchgrass, wheat,lamb’s quarters,chickweed, purslane,wild sunflower, pineseeds; weevils, beetles,flies, moths,grasshoppers, ants,spiders
Flying insects, someground insects andspiders
Mainly insects insummer; seeds of wastegrain, weeds andgrasses in winter
Hardwood and mixedhardwood forests,meadows, woodlandedges and clearings,orchards, backyardgardens
Coniferous or mixedforests, and forestedges. In winter atsuburban and rural birdfeeders
Farmlands, parks,suburban yards,preferably near water;also marsh edges, lakeshores, meadows nearpools and open, cut-overwoodlands near water
Open grasslandsincluding hayfields,meadows, pastures,prairies; Eastern preferspastures
Builds tiny nest inbranches the size ofwalnut halves, typically10–20 feet above theground; often near orsometimes directly overwater or near woodlandtrails on a horizontalbranch; Nest is made ofspider silk and plantdown and covered onoutside with lichens
Commonly buildscompact nest of grasses,rootlets, and moss onthe ground, concealedbeneath weeds andgrasses; occasionallymay place nest up to 8feet above ground inshrubs or treesBreeds in boreal forestand conifer plantationsin northern counties
Nests in colonies inpurple martin houses orsets of hanging gourdsset 15–20 ft. aboveground; sometimes inhollow tree cavities
Builds nest in a naturalhollow or scrape on theground. Weaves a loosedome-shaped roof overnest
Statewide
Statewide in winter
Statewide, but morenumerous in easternand southeasternWisconsin
Statewide
Migratory Songbirds Food Habitat Nest Sites Distribution
28 Wildlife and Your Land
NighthawkWhip-poor-will
American RobinThrushes
Grassland Sparrows
Barn Swallow
Tree Swallow
Chimney Swift
Scarlet Tanager
Brown ThrasherGray Catbird
Flying insects
Earthworms, wildberries and fruit such ascrabapples, apples,cherries, elderberries,blackberries, blueberries,cranberries and a varietyof insects and spiders
Insects, weed seeds,spiders
Flying insects
Flying insects; wildberries and seeds in coldweather when insectsare scarce
Flying insects includingbeetles, flies, ants, bugs;sometimes caterpillarshanging from treebranches
Variety of insects andother small inverte-brates; also some wildfruits
Insects, spiders, worms,small invertebrates,berries and fruits
Nighthawks found incities on gravel rooftops,railroad right-of-ways,sand dunes; sandy ruralareas, plowed fields,plains, remote blacktopareas; whip-poor-willsfound in open hard-woods or mixed oak andpine forests
Deciduous or mixedconiferous-deciduousforests, also riverbottomforests; robins verycommon in suburbanyards, parks
Farmsteads with barnsand outbuildings, opengrasslands, open forests,lakeshores
Open woodlands andfarmlands near ponds,streams and lakes; alsoriver bottomlands,beaver ponds, woodedswamps and marsheswhere dead trees standin or near water
Cities, towns and farms
Mature oak forests,bottomland hardwoodforests, groves, parks,orchards
Brushy woods, woodlandedges and thickets, nearsuburban or ruralhomesteads, dry marshedges, roadside shrubs,abandoned fields andfencerows
Neither bird buildsnests; nighthawks layeggs on gravel rooftopsor on bare ground;whip-poor-wills lay eggson ground on deadleaves
Robins build nest ofmud and grass indeciduous or coniferoustrees or shrubs, on nestplatforms in opengarages, church ledgesor abandoned buildings
Build nests of grasseslow to or on the ground
Builds mud nests onrafters of old barns orbuildings; sometimesunder bridges or inculverts
Builds nest of grasses inbluebird nest boxes, treecavities and abandonedwoodpecker holes about3–15 feet above ground
Builds nest on walls ofchimneys, silos, oldwells or in little-usedgarages, barns andshacks; sometimes intree hollows or stumps
Builds a small, flimsycup on horizontal oak,maple or elm limb about8–15 feet above ground
Thrashers build bulkynest from 1–3 feet abovethe ground butsometimes on the groundunder tangled thickets.Catbirds build nests2–10 feet above groundin dense willow andalder thickets, lilac andberry bushes or in smalltrees bordering streams
Statewide
Some statewide, a fewrestricted to northernforests
Statewide
Statewide, but leavesstate in August
Statewide
Statewide
Statewide
Statewide
Migratory Songbirds Food Habitat Nest Sites Distribution
Wildlife and Your Land 29
Chimney Swift
Tree Swallow
Scarlet Tanager
Savanna Sparrow
Brown Thrasher Nighthawk
Catbird
Robin
Wood Thrush
Barn Swallow
30 Wildlife and Your Land
Vireos (7 kinds, red-eyed vireo typical; afew are rare)
Warblers (37 kinds,yellow warbler typical,several are rare)
House Wren
Small insects andcaterpillars
Small insects, smallinvertebrates;occasionally may eatseeds and berriesparticularly duringcolder seasons wheninsects are not common
Insects, smallinvertebrates
Woodlands, deciduousthickets, brambles,undergrowth, openmixed northernhardwood-coniferousforests, mature wetforest, second-growthwoods and residentialareas
Variety of forest typesand river bottomlandhabitats. Each kind ofwarbler has its ownspecific habitatrequirements
Woody vegetation insuburban and ruralareas; frequentswoodland edges, openforests and clearings
Weaves nests of barkstrips, cobwebs, finegrass high in tree tops
Weaves small, round,cupped nests of grassesand other plant fibers,placed from groundlevel to tops of trees,depending on the type ofbird
Wrens build nests intree cavities, fenceposts,stumps, abandonedwoodpecker holes ornestboxes with openingspreferably 1 inch indiameter
Red-eyed Vireo andWarbling Vireo foundstatewide, othersrestricted or not ascommon
Few statewide, mostrestricted duringnesting season tonorthern andnortheastern counties;some restricted tofloodplain forests
Statewide
Migratory Songbirds Food Habitat Nest Sites Distribution
Yellow Warbler Red-eyed Vireo
House Wren
Wildlife and Your Land 31
Northern Cardinal
Black-capped Chickadee
Mourning Dove
Northern Flicker
At feeders: gray-stripeand black oil sunflowerseeds, safflower seeds,and peanut hearts,bread, cantaloupe seeds,peanut butter, pumpkinseeds, squash seeds,watermelon seeds, driedapples and raisins; Inthe wild: cedar berries,cherries, blackberries,elderberries, grapes,mulberries, raspberries,plums, strawberries,viburnum, blueberries,barley, bristlegrass,buckwheat, corn,hazelnut, hackberries,millet, oats, ragweed
At feeders: black oilsunflower seeds,peanuts, peanut butter,pumpkin seeds, suet,old bread anddoughnuts; In the wild:insects such as motheggs, katydids, spiders,caterpillars, beetles,flies, wasps; alsoblueberries, black-berries, wild cherriesand seeds fromgoldenrod, ragweed,hemlock; fat from deadanimals such as white-tailed deer during falland winter
Insects, grain, birdseed,snails, fruits, nuts;feeds primarily on weedseeds and winter grains,sunflowers, sorghum,ragweed, millet,barnyard grass,California poppy,canary grass, foxtail,bristlegrass, wild hemp,Japanese millet
Primarily ants; alsobeetles, caterpillars,cockroaches,grasshoppers, crickets,wild berries, red cedar,plums, hawthorn,hackberry seeds, corn,acorns, oats ragweed,rye, wheat; at feeders:suet, peanut butter,raisins and apples
Builds loose-knit, butbulky, nest of twigs,vines, bark strips,grasses and places it indense shrubbery ofconifer tree or smalldeciduous tree orvine/briar tangle;generally less than 10feet high
Excavates hole about4–10 feet above groundin very soft, rottingwood of dead tree suchas aspen, paper birch,yellow birch, willow,basswood, maple orwhite ash; or builds nestin fence post; will useexisting cavities or birdhouses; nest cavitiesfrequently lined withrabbit fur
Builds a platform ofloosely woven sticks onhorizontal branches inshrubs and trees,especially conifers about10–25 feet above ground
Excavates a nestingcavity in living tree,dead tree, utility pole,fencepost or side ofbuilding 2–60 feet aboveground
Statewide
Statewide
During summer:common in southernand central Wisconsin,uncommon in the north;in winter, common insouthern Wisconsinfarmlands
Statewide, butuncommon winterresident in southernWisconsin; rare winterresident in centralWisconsin
Resident Birds Food Habitat Nest Site Distribution
32 Wildlife and Your Land
American Goldfinch
Blue Jay
White-breasted NuthatchRed-breasted Nuthatch
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
Cedar Waxwing
Weed seeds fromragweed, dandelion,goldenrod, chickweed;some insects such asaphids, caterpillars,plant lice; at feeders:thistle (niger) seed,finch mix, black oilsunflower seed, crackednut meats, millet seeds
At feeders: gray-stripesunflower seeds,safflower seeds,peanuts, peanut butter,pumpkin seeds, squashseeds, suet, bread,crackers, raisins,apples; In the wild:blueberries, cherries,elderberries,strawberries, serviceberries, grapes,mulberries, plums,choke cherries, acorns,sumac seeds, corn, oats,wheat, buckwheat,sorghum, nuts,hazelnuts, pine seeds,insects, animal andplant matter
At winter feeders:black-oil sunflowerseeds, safflower seeds,suet; also eat acorns;red-breasted pries openconifer cone scales andremoves seeds for muchof its food; In spring andsummer: beetles, ants,spiders and otherinvertebrates;sometimes white-breasted uses nectarfeeders that have beenplaced for Baltimoreorioles
Cambium and tree sapand insects attracted tothe sap pits, which itdrills in a regular seriesof pit-like holes in trees;flying insects, acorns;will visit feeders for suet,peanut butter, crackedwalnuts, fruits; will alsodrink at nectar feeders
Wild fruits and berries,particularly red cedarberries, insects
Variety of woodedhabitats, farms, parks,cities and suburbs
White-breasted prefersdeciduous and mixedwoodlands, urban andrural yards; red-breasted prefers coniferforests
Deciduous, coniferousand mixed deciduous-coniferous forests,especially with aspen.Can be found duringmigration in orchards,parks, farmlands, orwoodlands
Open woods, orchards,farmland
Builds nest of thistleand cattail down late insummer; places nest inupright branches orhorizontal limbs of awide variety of treesand shrubs usuallyabout 5–15 feet aboveground
Builds bulky nest oftwigs, bark, leaves,mosses and plant fibersabout 10–25 feet aboveground and hidden incrotch of conifer ordeciduous tree; alsonests occasionally inshrubs
Nests in old woodpeckerholes about 5–50 feetabove the ground(white-breasted) orabout 15 feet aboveground (red-breasted),birdhouses (rarelybirdhouses for red-breasted)
Excavates cavity in liveor dead trees from 3–35feet above ground;especially favor aspeninfected with fungus
Builds nest of looselywoven grasses andfibers placed onhorizontal limb of a tree4–50 ft. above ground
Statewide
Statewide
White-breasted, state-wide;Red-breasted,north
Statewide, butuncommon duringsummer in central andsouthwest Wisconsin;uncommon in winter insouthern Wisconsin;rare in centralWisconsin
Statewide
Resident Birds Food Habitat Nest Site Distribution
Around humandwellings, especially infarm country; cities,suburbs, orchards,parks, gardens
Builds nest of twigs,grasses and debrisplaced in tree cavities,bird boxes and buildingledges
Roosts in old buildings,barns and under bridgesor cliffs; Droppings candeface buildings andsidewalks
Builds ball of grasses,weeds, trash placed inbluebird houses, porchrafters, holes in walls,awnings, behindshutters; competes withbluebirds and treeswallows in nestboxes
Fills cavities in trees orbirdhouses with a massof grasses, corn husks,cloth, feathers;competes with purplemartins in birdhouses
Southern half. Native toSouthwestern U.S., butwere shipped illegally toNew York as “Holly-wood Finches;” thespecies has sinceescaped and spread tonew territories
Statewide. Native to theOld World north of theequator
Statewide. Native toEurasia and NorthAfrica
Statewide. Native toEurasia
Non-native Birds Food Habitat Nest Sites Distribution