Study Shows Which Feeders and Seed Birds Prefer

February 10, 2010
By Bill Askenburg
Black-Capped Chickadee

Black-Capped Chickadee

A three-year study of 1,500 North American citizen scientists shows that birds prefer tube and platform feeders, stocked with black oil sunflower, sunflower chips, nyjer, and white proso millet.  The survey was led by ornithologist David Horn, as part of Millikin University’s Project Wildbird.

Some of the study’s conclusions include:

  • Tube bird feeders and platform feeders have more visitors than hopper feeders. Tube feeders attract smaller birds while platform feeders are best for larger birds.
  • Different seed types attracted different kinds of birds. For example, white proso millet attracts native sparrows and mourning doves. Small finches, including gold finches, prefer nyjer or sunflower chips. Larger species, like cardinals, woodpeckers and house finches, like black oil sunflower seeds.
  • Project Wildbird revealed the number of birds visiting feeders is about the same from season to season. What changes are the kinds of birds that appear at different times of the year.
  • The 10 most common species visiting feeders were: American Goldfinch; Black-capped Chickadee; Brown-headed Cowbird; Common Grackle; House Finch; House Sparrow; Mourning Dove; Northern Cardinal; Pine Siskin; and Purple Finch.
House Sparrows at Tube Feeder

House Sparrows at Tube Feeder

From 2005-08, Project Wildbird recorded over 20,000 bird feeder observations from 174 individuals in 38 states and 3 Canadian provinces. They observed 106 species and nearly 1.3 million bird visits.  Each participant created and monitored four bird feeding stations, with supplied feeders, poles, squirrel baffles and bird seed. Each feeding station was schedule to use a particular seed, with “scientists” making regular 45-minute observations.

The non-profit Wild Bird Feeding Industry Research Foundation funded Project Wildbird with a $3 million grant to Millikin University.

For more information:
Feeding time: Area study probes what birds want

Project Wildbird

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Related posts:

  1. World’s biggest feeder shows how to fill the gap for hungry birds
  2. February is National Bird-Feeding Month
  3. Great Backyard Bird Count Shows Where the Birds Are
  4. What to Consider When Choosing a Bird Feeder
  5. How to Attract Birds to Your Backyard

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New England Birdhouse

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