Nifty and Nimble Nuthatches!
Nuthatches are are very easy backyard birds to identify. If you see a
bird creeping downward on a tree, it’s a nuthatch. It’s the only species
that can “walk down a tree.” It needs no tail support because it has
incredibly strong feet!
That said, generally you won’t see large numbers of nuthatches in your yard. Most nuthatches visit feeders in ones and twos. They are feisty and aggressive birds, and pairs generally defend a territory of 10 to 30 acres. They feast on seeds and insects found in trees, and many times will hide seeds from feeders in tree bark for a snack later in the day or breakfast the next morning.
Red-breasted and White-breasted
nuthatches are the most common visitors to feeders in Michigan. They
enjoy suet, sunflower seeds and peanuts. Red-breasted Nuthatches are
pickier than White-breasted Nuthatches, and their diet is made up mainly
of conifer seeds.
Pygmy
Nuthatches live in ponderosa forests in the West and survive the bitter
winter nights by roosting with 50 to 100 or more other Pygmy Nuthatches
in tree cavities. With so many birds in the cavity, they stay warm and
can lower their metabolic rate to conserve energy.
Another species, Brown-headed
Nuthatches, live primarily in the Southeast United States in mature
pine forests. These birds live in flocks, although they do not have the
“sleepovers” the Pygmy Nuthatches have.
To attract nuthatches to your yard, try a suet or peanut feeder as well as our Wild Birds Unlimited seed cylinders.
Source:WBU Educational Resources: Nuthatches
| White-breasted Nuthatch |
That said, generally you won’t see large numbers of nuthatches in your yard. Most nuthatches visit feeders in ones and twos. They are feisty and aggressive birds, and pairs generally defend a territory of 10 to 30 acres. They feast on seeds and insects found in trees, and many times will hide seeds from feeders in tree bark for a snack later in the day or breakfast the next morning.
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Red-breasted Nuthatch
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Pygmy Nuthatch
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Brown-headed Nuthatch
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To attract nuthatches to your yard, try a suet or peanut feeder as well as our Wild Birds Unlimited seed cylinders.
Source:WBU Educational Resources: Nuthatches
Related Articles:
- Bird of the week: Red-breasted Nuthatch http://bit.ly/sXqKVH
- Fascinating Nuthatch Nesting Behavior: Bill-Sweeping & Wing Fanning http://bit.ly/s4MWlV
- Red-breasted or red-bellied? Who establishes bird names in the US? http://bit.ly/v2kVTV
- Do birds know winter is coming? http://bit.ly/uyDnQR


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