Turn Your Yard Into a Winter Refueling Spot for Birds

Photograph by Tom Vezo/Minden Pictures

Turn Your Yard Into a Winter Refueling Spot for Birds

To survive freezing nights, many birds must sustain themselves with berries rich in fats and antioxidants.

By Susan J. Tweit
Published: January-February 2013

Small songbirds face big challenges in winter—most of all, keeping warm. Consider the black-capped chickadee, one of the most common North American wintering birds. These lilliputians lose heat quickly because their surface area is large for their mass; they weigh about as much as a dozen paperclips (a third of an ounce) but stretch 5.5 inches long. Meeting that challenge means ramping up the number of hours they devote to feeding and seeking out foods rich in antioxidants and fats. At night chickadees cram themselves into tiny cavities and shiver, burning the day’s fuel to keep from freezing.

You can help chickadees and many other birds by planting native shrubs and trees yielding the right berries. Choose plants that are native to your region (see plant list) because birds (like the Bohemian waxwing, above) recognize them, and thus spend less energy foraging. Make sure to pick types that will thrive in your particular microclimate—a yard’s soil and environment. A plant that prefers moist soil, for instance, won’t do well on a hot, dry site. Nor will one that needs full sun thrive in shade. Planting native species is a surefire winner for everyone: You can have your beautiful berries and the birds can eat them.

12 Top Berry Producers 

NORTHEAST (Pennsylvania and north) 

Northern bayberry (Morella [Myrica] pensylvanica)

Partial shade, moist soil; needs both male and female plants to produce berries; can tolerate salt spray and coastal locations.

Southern arrowwood (Viburnum dentatum)

Sun to partial shade, moist, acidic soil; foliage rich burgundy in fall; important for native bees and butterflies as well as birds.

SOUTHEAST

(Virginia to Mississippi River plus Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and East Texas)

American beautyberry (Callicarpa americana)

Light shade in hottest areas; moist soils; gorgeous purple berries; deer love to browse.

Yaupon (Ilex vomitoria)

Sun to shade; drought to moist soils; holly-like evergreen foliage and bright red berries; needs both male and female plants to produce berries.

PLAINS

(Indiana west and south, including Central and West Texas)

Common hackberry (Celtis occidentalis)

Drought-tolerant, craggy tree with knobby bark; fruits eaten by many bird species; attracts butterflies and moths.

Prairie sumac(Rhus lanceolata)

Tall shrub; leaves turn brilliant scarlet and orange in fall; berries high in vitamin C.

SOUTHWEST

Skunkbush sumac (Rhus trilobata)

Tolerates some drought; often single-sexed colonies formed from one parent; berries high in vitamin C.

Torrey wolfberry (Lycium torreyi)

Tolerates drought and heat; spiny, sprawling shrub with small leaves; brilliant red berries eaten by many bird species.

ROCKIES

Western sandcherry (Prunus pumila var. besseyi)

Sandy to clayey soils; partial shade; sprawling shrub; white flowers form cherry-like fruits in fall.

Western Mountain Ash(Sorbus sitchensis)

Large shrub/small tree; needs moist soil; flowers white; leaves yellow to red in fall; waxwings and other birds love berries.

PACIFIC NORTHWEST

California wax myrtle (Morella californica)

Tree-like shrub with glossy evergreen leaves; fragrant; does best in well-drained soils; can tolerate some salt spray.

Pink honeysuckle (Lonicera hispidula)

Tolerates flooding and clay soils; pink flowers; will grow as shrub or vine; very decorative.

 

Supersize It: A recent study by researchers at the University of Rhode Island revealed how much fat—a.k.a. bird fuel—is stored inside several different types of berries. Among the most astounding findings: Northern bayberry—the Big Mac of plants—is more than half fat.
Plant % Fat

Northern bayberry (Morella [Myrica] pensylvanica)

 50.3%

Southern arrowwood(Viburnum dentatum)

 41.3%

Gray dogwood (Cornus racemosa)

39.9%

Northern spicebush (Lindera benzoin)

 33.2%
American burningbush (Euonymus atropurpurea)  31.2%

Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia)

 23.6%
 

Source: Designing Gardens With Flora of the American East, 2010, by Carolyn Summers 

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Author Profile

Susan Tweit

Type: Author | From: Audubon Magazine

Comments

Hello dude, really like this

Hello dude, really like this concept. I did not know much more about turning a yard into a winter refueling spot for birds but the allocation you did here makes me knowable about this issue. Thanks for this pretty nice allocation.
https://www.drsnooze.com/

Regions and berry-producing plants

Russ and other commenters,

The Plains region does include the Upper Midwest, and the Southeast does include Maryland. My apologies that the region descriptions didn't make that clear. (This is an abridged version of a longer article in AUDUBON Magazine.) For the Upper Midwest, I'd suggest bunchberry dogwood (Cornus canadensis) for a low, creeping ground-cover type shrub that's beautiful and also an excellent berry-producer for birds. Here is a description plus photos from the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Centers native plant database, an excellent resource: http://www.wildflower.org/plants/result.php?id_plant=COCA13 Southern arrowwood (Viburnum dentatum), despite the confusing common name, is also native to the Upper Midwest, and an excellent tall shrub for winter berries. In Maryland, depending on your location (mountains? coastal plain?) you could grow American Beautyberry and Northern Bayberry from the table above, both excellent choices for landscaping and for birds. Happy planting!

Right Ross, I too, am a

Right Ross, I too, am a midwesterner, and have chickadees all year, but also LOVE the waxwings when they show up, usually twice a year. I think the bayberry and arrowroot would be fine her in the midwest, is there any other good ones for our cold winters up north here?

It's a very good idea, but

It's a very good idea, but it's all about the budget. A particular organization can take this kind of responsibility. As an individual we must support this...
Leo Von Wendorff

berry bushes for birds

Maryland was left off too.

berry bushes for the birds.

The above article on the berry bushes was helpful, but it totally omited the upper midwest area. Such as the states of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan (upper & lower), Iowa and the Dakotas. We have a unique growing and weather system here and are looking for help on what will survive and produce for the birds.

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