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A Winter Wonderland of Birds

2/8/2023

 
Beach to Bayou - February 2023
There’s something exciting going on at our bird feeders in the winter. Learn about the surprise visitors you might find just outside your window!⁠
 
- by Dena Temple
​
Picture
Andy Reago & Chrissy McClarren, CC BY 2.0 | Wikimedia Commons
People who set up bird feeders and enjoy watching backyard birds already know the usual cast of characters around their feeders year-round: Northern Cardinal, Tufted Titmouse, Blue Jay, Northern Mockingbird. Some of our summer birds disappear or are seen much less frequently in the winter, such as Brown Thrasher, Ruby-throated Hummingbird and Indigo Bunting, to name a few. But winter brings new visitors to the South.

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Birds that breed in more northerly latitudes migrate south for the winter months, to the delight of Southern bird-watchers across the Mississippi coast. Most are what are known as short-distance migrants, which breed in northern Mississippi but travel a few hundred miles in the fall to their winter digs.
​

​ Some of the Southern arrivals we expect to see when temps get chilly are American Robin, American Goldfinch, Yellow-rumped Warbler and White-throated Sparrow. There are others, but these four are the most common of the winter arrivals here on the coast.

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American Robins, which do not eat seed, can be enticed into your yard with a water feature like a birdbath or dripper. | Dena Temple photo
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The beautiful White-throated Sparrow, a winter visitor from Canada. | Wikimedia Commons
 
Some years, our area experiences widespread reports of what are known as “winter finches” – Purple Finch, Pine Siskin and Red-breasted Nuthatch. (The Red-breasted Nuthatch is not actually a finch, but it gets lumped in with the winter finches because its diet consists of the same seeds as the finches.)  ​

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The raspberry-colored male Purple Finch can be distinguished from its cousin, the House Finch, by its reddish chest and wing feathers. A House Finch has brownish streaking on its chest and brown wings. | Cephas, CC BY-SA 3.0 | Wikimedia Commons
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The female Purple Finch is very similar to a female House Finch, but with broader streaking on its chest and a vivid eye stripe, which a House Finch does not have. | Dena Temple photo
 
In an ordinary year, none of these birds have any business being in South Mississippi. This phenomenon is known as “irruption,” which means “to undergo a sudden upsurge in numbers when natural ecological balances and checks are disturbed.”
 
Why does this happen? Irruption generally occurs when there is a life-threatening change where the birds belong, which in this case is southern Canada. Each fall a “winter finch forecast” is published, which details seed production in Canadian conifers and predicts finch movement from Canada.

All three of these birds depend on seeds from spruce, pine and birch trees to survive the harsh Canadian winters. When conifer seed crops fail, usually due to poor weather conditions in the summer months, the birds must move. Some species move west or east, and many move south.

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This delicate-looking little finch is a Pine Siskin. They are a bit smaller than an American Goldfinch, and like the goldfinch, they have a small bill sized for thistle/niger seed. | Wikimedia Commons
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This bathing shot shows the yellow feather edges, a distinguishing feature of the Pine Siskin. | Dena Temple photo
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Pine Siskins often arrive in hungry flocks that will quickly empty thistle feeders. | Dena Temple photo
 
In the Northeast, bird-watchers are experiencing irruptions of not only the three species we may see here, but also Evening Grosbeak, Red Crossbill, White-winged Crossbill and (rarely) Common Redpoll.
 
Our visitors from the north are still quite rare, although when an irruption happens, they are being seen with regularity. To increase your chances of seeing one in your yard, keep your feeders full and clean.

​Red-breasted Nuthatches can be found at mixed-seed or sunflower-seed feeders, and particularly like suet cakes. (Check your suet regularly for mold in our warm climate.) Purple Finches like mixed seed, and a flock of hungry Pine Siskins can decimate a full thistle (niger) seed feeder in a day.

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The beautiful Red-breasted Nuthatch is actually a member of the woodpecker family. | Dena Temple photo
 
If you do see one of these uncommon visitors, visit eBird.com to report your sightings. Researchers use the data on eBird to track the movement of birds, and your input in this “citizen science” project can affect future conservation efforts, funding or legislation.
 
You might also want to share photos of any rare visitors on your social media pages, to encourage your friends to take an interest in birds themselves. Plus, you get bragging rights for having a rare bird at your feeders!
​
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While common, Northern Cardinals are too pretty not to include in a story about winter birds. | Dena Temple photo

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