BIRDS
(Common Name) |
Cardinal
Blue Grosbeak
Buntings |
Purple
Martin |
Ruby-throated
Hummingbird |
|
| Location (North - N, South - S) and Time
of Residence (year-round - R, summer breeder - SB, winter resident
- WR, migrant - M) |
Cardinal
N (R), S (R)
Blue Grosbeak
N (SB), S (M)
Indigo and Painting Bunting
N (SB), S (WR) |
Purple Martin
N (R), S (SB) |
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
N (SB), S (R) |
|
| Preferred Natural Food |
Mostly seeds of wild and cultivated grasses, some
insects. Cardinals eat more than 100 kinds of fruits. |
Vast quantities of insects. |
Flower nectar, tiny insects and spiders. |
|
| Preferred Nesting Site |
Thickets, vines, dense stands of young saplings,
other brushy plants |
Natural cavities, holes and crevices in sides of
bluffs or cliffs. |
Limb of low tree, often overhanging water. |
|
| Will They Use Feeders? |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
|
| Nest Boxes? |
No |
Yes |
No |
|
| Special Management and Landscape
Preferences |
Cardinals prefer mixed gardens with hedges and
lawns backed by a variety of trees; have a strong preference for
sunflowers seeds. Buntings and grosbeaks like brushy pastures
and woodland edges; like an exposed perch to sing on; feed on
ground; feed on white proso millet at feeders. Buntings are
shy and require heavy cover near feeders. |
Prefer open meadows and lawns near water. Have
learned to nest in gourds and special apartment houses placed in
suitable habitat. Don't use pesticides nearby! |
Garden with variety of plantings is ideal,
including herbaceous flowering borders, running water, and special
sugar water feeders. Strongly attracted to red tubular
flowers like native firebush. |
|
BIRDS
(Common Name) |
Eastern
Bluebird |
Blue Jay |
Carolina Wren
House Wren |
|
| Location (North - N, South - S) and Time
of Residence (year-round - R, summer breeder - SB, winter resident
- WR, migrant - M) |
Eastern Bluebird
N and S (R) |
Blue Jay
N and S (R) |
Carolina Wren
N and S (R)
House Wren
N and S (WR) |
|
| Preferred Natural Food |
Primarily insects, some fruits and berries. |
Acorns, other nuts and berries, insects, small
reptiles and mammals. |
Mostly insects |
|
| Preferred Nesting Site |
Natural cavities in trees, old woodpecker holes in
trees and fence posts. |
Variety of trees 10 - 30' off the ground. |
Cavities, or crotches of trees of shrubs. |
|
| Will They Use Feeders? |
Rarely |
Yes |
Yes |
|
| Nest Boxes? |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
|
| Special Management and Landscape
Preferences |
Prefer orchards, old fields with scattered trees,
open, second growth woodlands. Birds are strongly territorial, so
place next boxes 100 yards apart (detailed plans available).
Commonly use birdbaths. Restricted to rural and agricultural areas
in south Florida. |
Prefer yards with large numbers of trees,
especially oaks, beeches and pines. Water is a major
attractant. Peanuts are especially attractive at
feeders. |
Like wooded gardens with dense shrub undergrowth.
Will nest in almost any cavity around homes; try hanging a gourd
under house eaves. Loves peanut butter/suet cakes. |
|
BIRDS
(Common Name) |
Mockingbird
Catbird
Brown Thrasher |
Carolina Chickadee
Tufted Titmouse |
Screech Owl
Barred Owl
American Kestrel |
|
| Location (North - N, South - S) and Time
of Residence (year-round - R, summer breeder - SB, winter resident
- WR, migrant - M) |
Mockingbird
N and S (R)
Catbird
N and S (WR)
Brown Thrasher
N and S (R) |
Carolina Chickadee
N (R)
Tufted Titmouse
N (R) |
Screech Owl
N and S (R)
Barred Owl
N and S (R)
American Kestrel
N and S (R) |
|
| Preferred Natural Food |
Insects, grubs, fruits and seeds |
Insects and many plant foods |
Mice and insects. |
|
| Preferred Nesting Site |
Dense, thorny shrubs or vines conceal basket-like
nests. Brambles ideal. |
Natural cavities and abandoned woodpecker
holes. |
Cavities. |
|
| Will They Use Feeders? |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
|
| Nest Boxes? |
No |
Yes |
Yes |
|
| Special Management and Landscape
Preferences |
Edge situations provided by gardens excellent for
mockingbirds; native berries are important food source. Catbirds
like access to water. Thrashers forage on the ground where leaf
litter is plentiful. |
Yards with mature deciduous and evergreen trees
supported by dense shrub and small tree understory are best.
Chickadees prefer to dig own cavities in partly rotted trunks or
stumps, especially pine and birch. Hanging suet feeders and
sunflower seeds are especially attractive. |
Like gardens with many old trees close to open,
unmowed areas for hunting. Prefer cavities in hardwoods and old
woodpecker holes in pines. Readily use appropriate nest boxes. Will
use water if provided. |
|
BIRDS
(Common Name) |
Woodpeckers |
Robin
Wood Thrush
Rufous-sided Towhee |
Orioles
Summer Tanager |
|
| Location (North - N, South - S) and Time
of Residence (year-round - R, summer breeder - SB, winter resident
- WR, migrant - M) |
Woodpeckers (Red-headed, Red-bellied, Downy,
Flicker, Pileated)
N and S (R)
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
N and S (WR) |
Robin
N and S (WR)
Wood Thrush
N (SB), S (M)
Rufous-sided Towhee
N and S (R) |
Orchard Oriole
N (SB), S (M)
Spot-breasted Oriole
S (R)
Northern Oriole
N and S (WR)
Summer Tanager
N and S (SB) |
|
| Preferred Natural Food |
Major consumers of forest pest insects, grubs and
eggs, ants, beetles; and also berries, nuts and seeds. |
Forage on ground for insects; also eat fleshy
fruits and berries. |
Insects, fleshy fruits, especially berries. |
|
| Preferred Nesting Site |
Cavities in dead or dying trees. |
Towhee - on or close to ground under dense shrub
cover. Wood
Thrush - shrub or small tree 6 - 12' high. |
Oriole - shade, street trees, preferable near
water.
Tanager - deciduous trees, often oaks. |
|
| Will They Use Feeders? |
Yes |
Robin and thrush - rarely.
Towhee - yes
|
Yes |
|
| Nest Boxes? |
Yes
(except pileated) |
No |
No |
|
| Special Management and Landscape
Preferences |
Pileated and red-bellied prefer old growth forests
with mixed hardwoods. Downy and flicker common in gardens with mix
of deciduous and coniferous trees and shrubs, some open ground.
Optimum garden for red-headed has lawns and shrub beds, a few large
pines and oaks and some dead snags nearby. Maintain snags in your
yard for all woodpeckers. Leave stumps and fallen logs as foraging
habitat. Will eat suet; red-headed likes bread on platform
feeders. |
Wooded gardens with densely planted understory.
Robins like lawns with scattered trees, berry bushes in winter.
Towhees fond of brush piles, prefer to forage under feeders on
ground, close to cover. Shaded, ground-level birdbaths or pools
with close cover of shrubs excellent. |
Prefer high feeding stations with fruit; northern
orioles enjoy suet. Attracted to gardens with mixed fruit trees,
especially orchard trees, dogwood, mulberry, tupelos, wild cherry
and blackberry. Orioles attracted to fruit at feeders, especially
oranges. |
|
BIRDS
(Common Name) |
Cedar
Waxwings |
Nuthatches |
Doves
White-crowned Pigeon |
|
| Location (North - N, South - S) and Time
of Residence (year-round - R, summer breeder - SB, winter resident
- WR, migrant - M) |
Cedar Waxwings
N and S (WR)
|
White-breasted Nuthatch
N (R)
Brown-headed Nuthatch
N and S (R) |
Morning and Ground Dove
N and S (R)
White-crowned Pigeon
S (R) |
|
| Preferred Natural Food |
Abundant fleshy fruits on shrubs and trees. Also,
buds and flowers of hardwood trees. |
Insects, seeds and nuts. |
Insects, seeds, nuts and fruits. All except pigeon
are ground feeders. |
|
| Preferred Nesting Site |
Not in Florida |
Cavities in dead trees or old woodpecker
holes. |
Pigeon - often nest in mangroves, usually on
offshore islands.
Dove- varies, from ground to shrubs, vines, etc. |
|
| Will They Use Feeders? |
Rarely |
Yes
|
Yes |
|
| Nest Boxes? |
No |
Yes |
No |
|
| Special Management and Landscape
Preferences |
Manage your property to include many fruiting
natives; roving flocks of waxwings will devour dogwood, holly and
red cedar berries in late winter. |
Don't cut snags! Many hardwoods and pines are
preferred cavity trees. Suet and sunflower seeds are feeder
favorites |
Need dense cover of shrubs near open fields or
lawns with scattered trees. Provide water on the ground -
birds like to bathe daily. |
|
BIRDS
(Common Name) |
Northern
Bobwhite |
Finches
Pine Siskin |
Yellow-billed Cuckoo |
|
| Location (North - N, South - S) and Time
of Residence (year-round - R, summer breeder - SB, winter resident
- WR, migrant - M) |
Northern Bobwhite
N and S (R)
|
Goldfinch
N and S (WR)
Purple Finch
N (WR)
Pine Siskin
N (WR) |
Yellow-billed Cuckoo
N and S (SB) |
|
| Preferred Natural Food |
Seeds, acorns, some fruit; some insects and
spiders. |
Buds, soft fruits, seeds, insects in summer. |
Caterpillars, grasshoppers, other insects. |
|
| Preferred Nesting Site |
Ground nest in brushy open grasslands and open
pine woods. |
Not in Florida |
8-12' high in shrubs or on horizontal tree
branch. |
|
| Will They Use Feeders? |
Yes |
Yes
|
No |
|
| Nest Boxes? |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Special Management and Landscape
Preferences |
Comes readily to seed on ground. Requires heavy
brush for daytime cover. A brush pile is ideal. |
Sweetgum and sycamore fruits are prized winter
foods; water is one of the best attractants. Most prefer high
feeders; goldfinches will feed on the ground. All love sunflower
seeds and niger (thistle) seeds. |
Best natural controller of tent caterpillars.
Generally prefer trees with dense canopies, such as oaks. |
|
BIRDS
(Common Name) |
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher |
Eastern
Phoebe
Great Crested Flycatcher
Eastern and Gray Kingbird |
Red-winged Blackbird
Grackles |
|
| Location (North - N, South - S) and Time
of Residence (year-round - R, summer breeder - SB, winter resident
- WR, migrant - M) |
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
N and S (WR)
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
N and S (R)
|
Eastern Phoebe
N and S (WR)
Great Crested Flycatcher
N (SB), S (R)
Eastern and Gray Kingbird
N and S (SB) |
Red-winged Blackbird
N and S (R)
Common and Boat-tailed Grackle
N and S (R) |
|
| Preferred Natural Food |
Tiny insects gleaned from foliage high in trees.
Kinglets also eat wax myrtle berries. |
Mostly catch insects, bees, etc. midair; also eat
grasshoppers ants and some fruits. |
Mostly seeds and grains, some insects. |
|
| Preferred Nesting Site |
Gnatcatchers nest on horizontal limbs 25' or
higher; use many kinds of trees. |
Often near water; kingbird likes medium shrubs or
trees.
Great crested - natural cavities.
Phoebe - bridges, rafters and eves. |
8-12' high in shrubs or on horizontal tree
branch. |
|
| Will They Use Feeders? |
Yes |
No
|
Yes |
|
| Nest Boxes? |
No |
Yes, except kingbird |
No |
|
| Special Management and Landscape
Preferences |
Prefer mature, diverse garden with good mix of
evergreen and deciduous trees. Occasionally visit small hanging
suet feeders. Rarely found in urban south Florida yards. |
Like deciduous and mixed woods, edge situations.
Attracted by gardens with streams, pools with small waterfalls,
other sources of running water. Favor many wild fruits |
Best natural controller of tent caterpillars.
Generally prefer trees with dense canopies, such as oaks. |
|
BIRDS
(Common Name) |
Warblers |
Vireos |
Sparrows |
|
| Location (North - N, South - S) and Time
of Residence (year-round - R, summer breeder - SB, winter resident
- WR, migrant - M) |
Warblers:
Orange-crowned and Yellow-rumped
N and S (WR)
Parula, Pine and Yellowthroat
N and S (R)
|
Vireos:
Red-eyed
N (SB)
White-eyed
N and S (R)
Yellow-throated
N (SB)
Blacked-whiskered
N (M), S (SB) |
Sparrows:
Chipping Sparrow
N and S (WR)
Song, White-throated and other migrant sparrow
N and S (M) |
|
| Preferred Natural Food |
Insects, some seeds |
Insects and spiders, some fleshy berries prior to
migration. |
Feed on ground, mostly weed and grass seeds, some
insects. |
|
| Preferred Nesting Site |
Large trees, except yellowthroat, shrubs near
water. Parula uses Spanish moss to construct nest. |
All suspend hanging nest in trees from 3'-4' off
ground (white-eyed) to tree tops (yellow-throated). |
Chipping-near ground in dense thickets, but rare
breeder only in N. Florida |
|
| Will They Use Feeders? |
Suet feeders only |
No
|
Yes |
|
| Nest Boxes? |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Special Management and Landscape
Preferences |
Many resident and migrant warbler species will be
attracted to a diverse, richly-planted garden with many canopy
layers, including mature trees. Oaks provide good source of
caterpillars. A water source will bring in seldom seen species.
Yellow-rumped, pine and orange-crowned commonly seen a suet
feeder. |
Same as warblers. Black-whiskered vireos favor
mangroves. |
Require mixed garden vegetation with close shrub
cover. Will visit ground feeders regularly. Liberally use water if
provided |