Date: Fri 07-Feb-1997
Date: Fri 07-Feb-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: LIBRAR
Quick Words:
bluebirds-houses
Full Text:
Building A House For Feathered Friends
BY ANDREA Z IMMERMANN
They may not be rent-paying tenants, but if you build a house for bluebirds
they will reward you with an intimate view of the cycles and small miracles of
the natural world. Using the following plans, individuals or families can
embark on an adventure that includes winter house-building, observation and
documentation of avian activity in a journal, and participation in the state's
Bluebird Nest-Box Survey.
"One of the reasons people like to [build these birdhouses] is the nature of
bluebirds themselves - they are very colorful and very melodious in sound. And
people like to have them around," said Jenny Dickson, a wildlife biologist
with the DEP's Nonharvested Wildlife Program.
"An added benefit of attracting bluebirds is they're insect eaters that keep
down the number of caterpillars and grasshoppers that can damage shrubs,
trees, and sometimes vegetable gardens. That is true of other cavity-nesters
too, particularly when they're feeding their young because they need a high
protein diet then."
The DEP's bluebird house plans were designed not only to meet bluebirds'
needs, but to be durable, and easy to clean and repair. Each is easily
constructed with hand tools and a minimum of materials.
Although most woods will do, cedar, pine or cypress is recommended; do not use
chemically treated wood such as pressure-treated lumber or exterior plywood.
If the wood has a smooth surface, score or groove the interior surface of the
front, below the entry hole, to assist nestlings in climbing out of the box.
Use drywall screws to assemble it, to facilitate repairs; Phillips-head screws
may deter the curious from peeking in.
To weatherproof the nest box, treat the outside surface with linseed oil.
Never paint, stain or treat the interior of the house or the entry hole. It is
also better not to paint the outside because the box will then retain more
heat than it otherwise would and may actually cook the eggs.
Mount the nest box five feet above ground level on galvanized pipe (attached
with screws or pipe brackets) or on garden stakes that are 6-7 feet high
(attached with carriage bolts). If you use stakes, flatten the tabs to
discourage raccoons.
Here are some DEP tips on how to station and maintain your bluebird house:
Avoid brushy and heavily-wooded areas; house wrens will probably dominate
existing nest boxes there.
Do not place box close to houses or barns because house sparrows tend to be
abundant there. House sparrows will kill bluebirds and destroy eggs and young.
Do not use corn for bird feeding because it attracts sparrows.
Avoid areas where pesticides are used.
Face boxes toward an open area in any direction. Ideally, the opening should
face away from prevailing winds. A tree or suitable perch 40-100 feet from the
box provides a perfect rest stop for young on their first flight.
Keep boxes at least 100 yards apart so bluebirds can establish territory
around the nest box.
Protect against predators using predator guard, or other methods.
Check the boxes once a week during the nesting season to record progress of
the nestlings and to control house sparrows. Remove house sparrow nests
immediately when found (see information below on identifying nests); to
encourage second or third broods, remove bluebird and other nests as soon as
young birds fledge from the box.
Inspect the box in early fall and late winter; clean and repair if necessary.
Bluebirds are less likely to next in a box that has an old nest in it. Old
nests also increase the numbers of parasites in the box, often resulting in
nest failure.
Plant native berry-producing trees and shrubs to provide fall and winter food.
Use "paired boxes" if nesting bluebirds are harassed or driven off by tree
swallows. Quickly set up a second box 20-30 feet from the first. A tree
swallow pair will select one box for nesting and protect the other box against
use by other swallows, allowing bluebirds to claim it.
If you shy away from attempting to build a birdhouse because you are not
mechanically inclined, the DEP is offering a free workshop from 1:30 to 2:30
pm on Saturday, March 15, at Sessions Woods Education Center in Burlington,
where you can build and take home a completed nest box.
A slide presentation will explore the natural history of the bluebird and its
status in Connecticut; immediately following, the workshop will be held. All
materials are provided free of charge but registration is required and all
participants are asked to bring a Phillips-head screwdriver to use.
To register, call the education center at 860/675-8130.
Bibbed Marauders
In The Bluebird Bulletin , an annual supplement to Connecticut Wildlife ,
Jenny Dickson described "Bibbed Marauders of Bluebird Nests." House sparrows
were first introduced in the US in 1850 as a control for spring cankerworms
and elm spanworms that were damaging eastern shade trees. But the view of this
species has been altered somewhat due to its behavior during the breeding
season.
"They are ruthless in their attempts to dominate nesting areas, so much so
that they tend to out-compete many of our native cavity-nesting birds like
bluebirds, tree swallows, purple martins, and chickadees, to name a few,"
writes Ms Dickson.
"House sparrows aggressively attack competing adults and nestlings alike,
often pecking them to death. They will also destroy eggs and even throw them
out of nest boxes. It is not unusual to find an adult bluebird and its young
dead inside a nest box, victims of a house sparrow attack for possession of
the box."
Ms Dickson recommends removing house sparrow nests and eggs from the boxes.
"It may take weeks to discourage the sparrows, but be persistent. Do not
remove the nests of any other birds - native bird nests are protected by law,"
she writes. "Keep in mind that sparrows adapt much more easily [than
bluebirds] to nesting in other locations."
A house sparrow nest is "very sloppy." It is made of coarse grass, leaves,
rootlets, straw and possibly bits of cloth and litter. When built in a nest
box, it often has a domed roof. House sparrows will lay three to seven oval
eggs that are white, gray or greenish, with irregular brown speckles.
If you feel sympathetic towards house sparrows and prefer to leave them in the
nest box, you should still fill out the DEP survey because it will help
indicate the extent of the problem with this species in our area.
Likewise, Ms Dickson is very interested in knowing about any species living in
your bluebird box, or hearing that there was no activity.
A State Initiative
The Bluebird Restoration and Wood Distribution Project was established in 1980
by the Wildlife Division in an effort to increase eastern bluebird populations
in Connecticut. In January, the division provided wood to create birdhouses to
groups across the state; it offers the accompanying plans to groups who missed
the deadline and to individuals who want to encourage bluebird population.
As of last April, more than 1,288 groups had participated in this project,
building 31,250 nest boxes.
Anyone who wants to participate in the division's survey can request a free
fact sheet and postage-paid survey card by writing to the Nonharvested
Wildlife Program, PO Box 1550, Burlington, CT 06013-1550. Even if a house
wren, house sparrow, tree swallow, or other cavity-nester becomes a squatter
in the bluebird box, the division is interested in hearing about it.
The goal of the Bluebird Restoration Project is to expand the nest box network
statewide.
"A lot of Fairfield County is very good habitat for bluebirds," said Ms
Dickson, adding western Connecticut was the first area in which the population
started to increase. "I know there are boxes in Newtown and that bluebirds
have inhabited them."
The wildlife biologist encourages everyone interested to participate because
she wants to gather as much information as possible throughout the state.
"The more people who want to send in survey cards, the happier I'll be," she
said.
The survey project is administered by the DEP Wildlife Division Nonharvested
Wildlife Program. Formally established in 1986, the program focuses on
inventory, research, management and conservation of wildlife species that are
not traditionally hunted - song birds, raptors, shorebirds, small mammals,
reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates.
The Wildlife Division's bi-monthly publication, Connecticut Wildlife , is
available for $6 a year. It offers profiles of some of the state's wildlife
species, information about wildlife habitat improvement techniques,
conservation education/firearms safety tips and hunting season results,
articles by Wildlife Division biologists, and updates on state and federal
wildlife related legislation.
For more information about bluebirds, the DEP suggests the following material:
Sialia: The Quarterly Journal of the North American Bluebird Society ,
membership/subscription information, NABS, PO Box 6295 Silver Spring, MD
20916-6295; Bluebirds Forever , 1994, Connie Toops, Voyageur Press,
Stillwater, MN, 128 pp, 120 color photos; The Bluebird Book , 1991, Donald and
Lillian Stokes, Little, Brown, and Company, Boston, 96 pp, color photos;
Enjoying Bluebirds More , 1993, J. Zickefoose, Bird Watcher's Digest Press,
Manetta, Ohio, 33 pp.; videos by Birds Eye View Production in Afton, MN -
Jewels of Blue: The Story of the Eastern Bluebird , Bluebird Trail: How tot
Start and Maintain a Bluebird Trail and Backyard Blues.
