Before winter descends in earnest, it’s a good idea to check
your bird feeding station for potential dangers. It’s a dreadful irony to
invite birds in for human enjoyment if the price they pay is injury or even
death.
The windows through which we so enjoy watching our winter
birds are treacherous deathtraps. Windows kill half a billion to as many as a
billion birds in the United States every year. Of birds that hit windows and
fly away, studies conclude that a full 50 percent die later from head trauma
and other collision-related injuries. Many of these birds aren’t drawn into our
yards by feeders: every spring and fall I hear of residential house window
mortality by Ovenbirds, cuckoos, and other insectivores that never visit
feeders. Some of these were attracted to yards by all the bird activity even
though they themselves don’t visit feeders. I’ve been brought dead and injured
saw-whet and Boreal Owls that had been drawn to feeding stations not for bird
seed but for the birds themselves.
Many window-related deaths take place in cities—birds have
to pass through all kinds of habitat in their journeys to the tropics, and many
nocturnal migrants are disoriented by lights at skyscraper windows up at the
elevations at which the birds are migrating. Several large cities have
organizations that work on minimizing those kills by encouraging owners and
managers to douse the lights on good migration nights. [See the Fatal Light Awareness Program's website.) But kills at lower
windows are just as bad, and trickier for us to deal with. A recent study inEdmonton found that birds are, as one might expect, most likely to be killed in
areas where their numbers are most dense—in other words, in rural areas, in
established urban areas that have many mature trees, and near bird feeding
stations. So whatever we can do to minimize the issues in our yards does make a
difference.
Affixing the American Bird Conservancy's tape to a window. |
Unfortunately, making our windows safe for birds isn’t easy.
When you’re installing new windows, double-hung windows with the screens on the
outside are the only windows that are actually bird-friendly, at least as long
as those screens stay up. You can affix decals or tape to the outside of the
glass—including some sold by the American Bird Conservancy—to help birds see
the glass, but it’s important to remember that in nature birds easily negotiate
flying rapidly between branches. The only way decals or tape work effectively
is when you leave no more space between them than a spread hand.
Setting bird netting on the outside of a window can help, too, though it’s tricky to get it set to be taut enough to work as a trampoline rather than a bird trap. The BirdScreen Company customizes window screening designed to be hung on the outside of windows; creative people can devise similar systems for themselves.
Setting bird netting on the outside of a window can help, too, though it’s tricky to get it set to be taut enough to work as a trampoline rather than a bird trap. The BirdScreen Company customizes window screening designed to be hung on the outside of windows; creative people can devise similar systems for themselves.
Whether or not you can get up external screening, decals, or
tape, set your feeders directly on the glass or window framing. When birds fly
off from a feeder set any further than 3 feet away from the window, they can
collide at top speed. When we set feeders any further than that while still at
a comfortable distance for our viewing pleasure, we are unknowingly setting a
deathtrap. One Mother’s Day, my husband and kids built a big platform feeder
set into the framing of our dining room window, and since then not a single
bird has crashed into what had been a real killer. Now THAT was a gift that
keeps on giving.