Problems with house sparrows
on the bluebird trail
Predator Identification
Distinguishing between Attacks by HOSPs and Other Predators
See also the Predator
Diagnosis webpage
Also see other HOSP information under Passive Control, Active
Control, Philosophy, Lime, General, Disposal, etc.
In addition to Messages that have appeared in the Bluebird
Mailing Lists on this topic, the following are on the Audubon
Society of Omaha website:
Subj: RE: male HOS
Date: 5/11/99 10:31:38 PM Central Daylight Time
From: james-walters"at"uiowa.edu (James P. Walters)
Sender: owner-BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Reply-to: james-walters"at"uiowa.edu
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Kevin Harrell posts:
SNIP
It is extremely important that people are sure of the
identification of the birds as house sparrows before destroying
the nests or putting a BB through them. From a distance, what
looks like a house sparrow may be a rarer native North American
bird. Indeed enthusiastic blue-birders can cause more harm than
good; however, in North America, the only good house sparrow is
a dead one.
I was surprised to see the post by Billi Ashby - explaining her
efforts to make certain of the House sparrow identification, before
instituting control measures. As I explained to her off-list,
this is a "problem" many in the upper Midwest would
probably welcome, where House sparrows are more than common; they
are ubiquitous.
I don't particularly wish to reopen the sparrow thread (I'll save
that for next winter when we are all off the trail, out of our
gardens, away from baseball, etc.). BUT, Kevin's last point prompts
this rejoinder. It's doubtful that General Phil Sheridan (who
made the same statement about Native Americans) was anymore in
touch with - take your pick: 1) God's; 2) the goddess's; 3) "higher
authority's;" 4) Nature's; 5) fill in the blank's - plan,
than are modern bluebirders in their antipathy to House sparrows.
The world (not to mention the universe) is a complex place. Anyone
who's sure they "know" the plan, should sketch it out,
and get the patent.
Jim Walters james-walters"at"uiowa.edu
Johnson County Songbird Project
1033 E. Washington
Iowa City, IA 52240-5248 (319) 466-1134
U.S.A.
Date: Thu, 30 Mar 2000 08:36:17 -0800
From: "W.Guglieri" wendyg"at"jps.net
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Do HOSPs attack open nests?
Greetings all from Wendy Guglieri in sunny Rescue, California:
While sitting outside having coffee and enjoying watching my
WEstern BLuebirds busily building their nest at the end of the
drive, a small white object dropped out of the oak tree over
the drive. It was a bird egg - completely white and about 1
1/4" long. Perhaps a brown towhee? It had been well
pecked out on one side and the contents were completely gone,
although it must have just happened. the interior of the egg
was quite wet.
So my question: Who did this? A HOuse SParrow? (For the first
time in 4 years here, I've seen a pair of HOSPs here daily.)
I thought they only attacked cavity nesters.
Thanks for your input. wg
Date: Thu, 30 Mar 2000 11:53:47 -0700
From: "Linda" ljand"at"vcn.com
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: Do HOSPs attack open nests?
Yes, I watched house sparrows attack a kingbird nest last summer
and destroy the eggs. The nest was too high up for me to get
to in a hurry, and I was afraid to shoot because I might hit
a kingbird. I felt very helpless. The kingbirds put a new bottom
in the nest and laid new eggs. But a good many birds--blackbirds,
grackles, jays, house wrens, starlings--might peck holes in
the eggs. Chipmunks or squirrels might also be the culprits,
since the insides were missing. I've only seen house sparrows
destroy eggs, not eat them.
Linda
SE Wyoming Grasslands, USA
ljand"at"vcn.com
...
Date: Thu, 30 Mar 2000 20:36:48 -0800
From: Hatch Graham birdsfly"at"innercite.com
To: wendyg"at"jps.net
Cc: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: Do HOSPs attack open nests?
Hi Wendy: totally a guess but sounds more like an attack by
a Scrub Jay. I haven't researched what would have a 1.25 inch
white egg--that's pretty big.
Hatch
...
Date: Fri, 31 Mar 2000 07:18:43 -0500
From: "Bruce Burdett" blueburd"at"srnet.com
To: "Wendy Rescue CA Guglieri" sutterfolk"at"jps.net
Cc: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: re. white eggshell
Wendy, et al,
Was the hole in the egg, by any chance, large enough for a
chick to have made his exit from it, - a chick who is at this
moment safely up in the tree with his nestmates? Chicks often
get out of their eggs through astonishingly small apertures.
Or could some nest-robber have lugged it from somewhere else
and eaten the contents at his leisure? The nest-robbers I've
been able to watch in action, Corvids mostly, have all carried
the eggs off and slurped the contents at some remove from the
nest.
Bruce Burdett, Sunapee NH blueburd"at"srnet.com
Note: The masculine pronouns I have used in this post were
employed in the perfectly proper neuter sense, and should NOT
be interpreted as having any sexist connotation. This "him/her"
and "he/she" ploy I have always found mildly annoying.
Date: Fri, 31 Mar 2000 10:33:06 -0800
From: "W.Guglieri" wendyg"at"jps.net
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: the empty eggshell mystery...
Greetings all.
Thanks to everyone who has ventured opinions about the pecked
(and empty) white eggshell that I found. Those of you who suggested
jay were right. Yesterday afternoon I actually saw a Scrub Jay
fly into a tree near me with another of those eggs in his mouth!
He sat on the branch and pecked at it; must have eaten whatever
was inside, then just dropped it to the ground. Same type of
egg. It's actually 1 1/4 - 1 1/2" long, pure white. I'm
assuming a brown towhee, but certainly could be wrong.
It's reported to be reaching a high of 80 degrees in Sacramento
today (we're slightly cooler in the foothills),and a bit windy.
Beautiful...
Wendy Guglieri
Rescue, California
wendyg"at"jps.net
Date: Sat, 20 May 2000 22:15:59 EDT
From: Brucemac1"at"aol.com
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Tree Swallow Tragedy
I've been watching a pair of Tree Swallows during their nestbox
selection process.
They've been around for a month and finally selected one of
my nestboxes 75 ft from my kitchen window. Just a few days ago,
I peeked in and saw five tiny eggs!! A day or two later, I peeked
again....the female TRES sat tight on the nest and didn't fly
off.
Today, I peeked again and was dismayed to find that none of
the eggs could be found. (I found a portion of a shell 60 feet
from the box??) HOSP has been around and have apparently chosen
a nearby box (35 feet away) for their nest. Would the HOSP remove
these eggs..?? There have been on wrens around this year. Gr-r-r-r!!
It is my practice to allow the HOSP to nest in a couple of
my boxes. As they produce eggs, I remove them, one at a time,
and place the egg in a glass of ice cubes and water for an hour.
I then mark them and replace the chilled eggs. The female will
usually incubate them for 3 to 4 weeks and then give up.
Any ideas as to what may have happened to my TRES eggs..?
Bruce, near Detroit
Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 21:41:39 -0500
From: "R_C Walshaw" walshaw"at"gte.net
To: "Bluebird Listserve" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Maymard/dead birds
Maynard reported dead birds in the nestbox. I realize that
problems like these are different in different areas, but as
I don't have to contend with house wrens here whenever I find
dead adults and/or young it is always the work of house sparrows.
Bluebird Bob, Northeast Oklahoma.
Date: Sat, 27 May 2000 03:37:17 GMT
From: Jess jessb"at"afo.net
To: Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Fwd: Comments
Can anyone help this person? Send mail to: rlcar"at"gateway.net
I figured it was house sparrows and the empty skeleton was
due to ants after it was dead.
____________________________________________________________________________
Email: rlcar"at"gateway.net
FirstName: Lisa
Message
We have two bluebird boxes and have had much success, until
this year. We have fornd a mother bluebird dead onher nest with
her eggs stil under her; something had eaten all but her head
and body cavity. Today I found another bluebird dead on the
ground outside of the box. Just it's head was missing. Please
let me knnnnow what is happening. We live in southern Ohio.
Date: Fri, 07 Jul 2000 09:26:53 -0700
From: Norma Zier karon"at"discoverynet.com
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: help on nest id
I have just checked some boxes and think that on of them has
a tree swallow nest. The nest is almost like a bower and has
lots of feathers in it. The eggs are sort of gray with what
look to me like rust or brown markings all over them. The color
of the eggs are what is confusing to me as the book I have states
that the eggs are white or cream with dark markings on them.
Do you think this is a tree swallow nest?
Thank You
Norma Zier
Indep Mo.
Date: Fri, 7 Jul 2000 12:45:29 -0400 (EDT)
From: Koby Prater koby_2004"at"iwon.com
To: karon"at"discoverynet.com, BLUEBIRD-L"at"CORNELL.EDU
Subject: RE: help on nest id
Norma,
This sounds a heck of alot like A House Sparrow nest. The best
way to tell the identity of this nest is to see who tends to
it. First look up the House Sparrow in your field guide, and
then look to see if that is it. If it is then do the following.
Trust me if you want Bluebirds, you don't want House Sparrows.
House Sparrows are vicious killers of our native cavity nesting
birds. They are so low that they'll kill Bluebirds, Tree Swallows,
Chickadees, and whatever else, and they're babies, or puncture
their eggs, and then build their nest over the dead bodies,
and have their own young. Please don't let this happen. If you
let them have their own young, this creates more vicious killers.
The best thing to do is to trap and eliminate these, non native
originally from Europe, birds. If you would like more infor
on these "flying rats" and their behavior and hideous
ways please contact me for more. I am sure you'll get more info
on this from others.
Happy Bluebirding to all,
Koby Prater
Seneca, MO (SW corner of MO)
Date: Fri, 7 Jul 2000 14:25:48 -0400
From: "Bruce Burdett" blueburd"at"srnet.com
To: karon"at"discoverynet.com, BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: help on nest id
Norma: All the Tree Swallow eggs I've seen have been pure white
with no markings of any kind. What you describe, I'm sorry to
say, sounds like a
house sparrow, especially your use of the word "bower".
These nests often have woven canopies over them, and the entrance
is more from the side than from the top. They also will sometimes
use some GREEN grass mixed in with the dry, plus some trashy
stuff, including feathers and paper. The eggs can vary a lot
in color, but generally they are as you described them. House
sparrow experts please correct me if I'm wrong.
Bruce BurdettNH blueburd"at"srnet.com
...
Date: Fri, 7 Jul 2000 14:31:13 -0400
From: "Bruce Burdett" blueburd"at"srnet.com
To: karon"at"discoverynet.com, BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: help on nest id
Norma: - I should also add that if they are house sparrows,
you should exterminate them in the quickest and most humane
way you can think of. They're nothing but bad news.
Bruce Burdett, NH
...
Date: Fri, 7 Jul 2000 15:03:37 -0400 (EDT)
From: Barry Whitney barryw"at"therock.mcg.edu
To: karon"at"discoverynet.com
Cc: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: HOSP egg photo Re: help on nest id
...
There is a photo and egg description at
http://www.pma.edmonton.ab.ca/vexhibit/eggs/vexeggs/passer/hsparr.htm
Other HOSP info
http://www.crosswinds.net/~barryw/bluebird/hosp.htm
&
THE GUIDE HOUSE SPARROWS & CONTROL
North American Bluebird Society (NABS)
http://www.nabluebirdsociety.org/sparrow.htm
Photo and sound bite
http://www.mbr.nbs.gov/id/framlst/i6882id.html
Drawing of male and female
http://www.pclink.com/rlovgren/nature9p.htm
House Sparrow Control, The Huber Trap ~~ Joe Huber
http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/HOUSESPARROWCONTROL
HOSP control ~~ Ed Nied, Jr.
http://members.tripod.com/~herper/housesparrow.html
House Sparrow ID and Control ~~ Barry Whitney
http://www.crosswinds.net/~barryw/bluebird/hosp.htm
Date: Fri, 07 Jul 2000 14:44:33 -0500
From: Carolyn Hall cjhall"at"huntel.net
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: help on nest id
karon"at"discoverynet.com
Norma Zier,
You have a wren nest. When you day "bower" is it made
of grass or sticks. Definately sticks are a wren nest BUT I
have had a wren's nest made entirely of hay and it was a "bower".
Carolyn Hall, Bassett, NE
Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2000 14:26:48 -0400
From: "Karen Deeds-Jarvie" deeds"at"bghost.net
To: Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Unusual HOSP death???
Hi everyone,
Had something unusual happen and wanted to get your feedback.
As you know, we have HOSP problems here. But luckily those that
we haven't caught are totally caught up in holding and keeping
our decoy Peterson box. After we eliminated the first male rogue,
we've had various attempts by other males to hold the box, but
they give up and move on pretty quickly. The box was vacant
for about a week, when one day we saw three female sparrows
making an attempt to nest there. At least there was a lot of
activity. Then they were gone, and a male or various males took
over for a few days. Today we decided to check the box for nest
activity and much to our surprise found a dead female sparrow.
She was nearly decapitated from the azzzult! It was really an
awful sight, not because it was a HOSP but because it shows
how viciously sparrows can attack even one of their own. At
least that's our guess. But why would they attack a desirable
female sparrow? Have any of you ever seen such a thing? It seemed
odd to us.
Also, we wondered, how do baby bluebirds get water? My husband
said, "The parents probably bring it to them." I figured
it was in the food itself. Still, you'd think they'd dehydrate
without liquid in their diet. Does anyone know?
Karen :-)
B.G., Ohio
P.S. We're past the twelve day mark now. Batman and Robyn are
feeding like crazy. Batman, we've noticed, rarely removes poop
sacks from the nest. The two times he has done it, he only went
as far as our garage roof, where he dropped them. Typical man!
Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2000 10:18:49 -0400 (EDT)
From: Koby Prater koby_2004"at"iwon.com
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"CORNELL.EDU
Subject: Terrible Tragedy! :(
Hello all,
This morning at about 8:30 I went outside to watch "my"
Bluebirds. After a minute or so, daddy flew up with food. He
peeked inside the box, and immediately jerked his head out and
flew off to a nearby branch. Then momma flew up and went inside,
she came back out shortly. I knew something was up so I went
and looked. The nestcup was empty. I took out the nest and looked
down on in it and saw 1 baby, it was dead, and had small ants
on it. I took it out and put it in my hand saw another baby
buried in the nest material. It was also dead. I am thinking
a snake as no nest material was disturbed, but why would a snake
kill 2 and not eat them. There was supposed to be 4 healthy
2 day olds in their. I also thought maybe a BlueJay but there
is a Noel guard on that even a starling can't fit in. I am a
big mess right now. This box is on a 4X4 wooden post. I had
no idea that snakes could get around a Noel Guard. I had never
heard of that. I was going to put a PVC guard on and change
the post to EMT conduit at the end of the season. I guess I
waited way to late. What gets me is that the parents came and
looked like it just happened. It could have happened from 4:30
to dark last night or early this morning. I don't know. Well
I am hoping the Bluebirds will find somewhere else to nest.
There are about 3 possible nest boxes besides mine. As soon
as I get back from vacation I will be upgrading my mounting
and protection ways. This will be my last post before I leave,
so fare well, and I hope you guys and gals have a better day
than me. I will read all posts up to about 6:00 this evening.
Thanks for your support,
Koby Prater
Seneca, MO (SW corner of MO)
Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2000 10:35:44 -0400 (EDT)
From: Koby Prater koby_2004"at"iwon.com
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"CORNELL.EDU
Subject: Culprit Found. :(
Hello again all,
I just found the culprit about 20 yards away. If it was the
culprit it is a 3 feet long garter snake. Of course you all
know what I did beacause I am as mad as possible right now,
and I don't wanna hear any lectures about killing snakes. I
have my right to kill snakes. These snakes can't kill and digest
a mouse. These snakes kill our friendly little toads, and frogs,
and I could care less if they take care of that population.
I know it is wrong, but when they go this far it will happen
to them. Sorry but that is how people around hear deal with
snakes.
Koby Prater
Seneca, MO (SW corner of MO)
Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2000 10:42:36 -0400
From: "Bruce Burdett" blueburd"at"srnet.com
To: koby_2004"at"iwon.com, BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: Terrible Tragedy! :(
Koby,
Had it been a snake, I'm pretty sure he would have eaten everything
in sight.
The 4"x4", I think, is not a good idea. I'm partial
to 3/4" or 1" galvanized pipe. I've never used the
PVC, so I can't speak to that. Your culprit could have been
any number of things. Your next best move, I'd say, is to provide
maximum anti-predator contraptions in the future, of every kind
you can think of. Could your LOCAL bluebirders be of any help?
They must know the local varmints
Bruce Burdett, NH blueburd"at"srnet.com
...
Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2000 16:48:50 -0400
From: "Randy Jones" randyj"at"enter.net
To: koby_2004"at"iwon.com
Cc: "Bluebird Listserve" bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: Terrible Tragedy! :(
Oh, Koby, I know how disheartening this is! I deeply sympathize
with you. You have learned the hard way that wooden posts just
are deadly to the bluebirds, and that (apparently) snakes can
handle the Noel guard with ease.
You won't be discouraged though. I'm sure you will work hard
to make your boxes as safe for your bluebirds as you can next
year, and I'm also sure they will come back to some of your
boxes.
Randy Jones
Allentown PA
randyj"at"enter.net
PS: I have PVC hanging predator guards on all my steel posts,
and I never stop worrying!
Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2000 22:47:55 -0500
From: "Bob Walshaw" robert.walshaw"at"gte.net
To: "Bluebird Listserve" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Koby - dead birds
This sounds more like a house sparrow attack. Snakes don't
leave food. Were the heads pecked? Sorry to hear the bad news.
This sort of thing is always tough, and trapping and eliminating
the house sparrow only keeps it to a minimum as we can never
get all of them. Bluebird Bob.
From: "Nancy Bubb" bubbent"at"mixi.net
Date: Sat, 31 Mar 2001 07:42:29 -0500
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Reply-To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Harlan IN -- near Fort Wayne (northeast corner of Indiana)
Update on previous Message (below): I noticed bluebirds appear
to have vacated their nest and are interested in another box
just over 100 feet away. This 2nd house has what I think is
a sparrow's nest in it (monofilament line not working here anymore).
I really don't know how to ID a sparrow's nest-- this nest is
small, looks ready for eggs and has a few very small white feathers
here and there inside it. The original house w/EABL nest is
now being investigated by a male sparrow (monofilament line
stopped working here too). I looked at the EABL nest inside
the first box and discovered that the inside, rounded out part
of the nest was messed up-- probably by the sparrow. A swap
of boxes for now. No eggs in either yet. I'll keep you posted.
Glad I have several boxes available on our property. Hopefully
one will serve as a permanent nest box for the bluebirds.
Nancy Bubb
Harlan Indiana
-----Original Message-----
From: bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com [mailto:bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com]On
Behalf Of Fawzi P. Emad
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2001 4:48 PM
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Subject: Re: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Nancy and all, please let us know where you are located. This
way we can tell which birds are doing what and where... Thanks,
Fawzi from MD
----- Original Message -----
From: "Nancy Bubb" bubbent"at"mixi.net
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2001 3:04 PM
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Six EABLs throughout winter... now down to two (a pair). They
just completed
a nest (hoping for 1st egg soon) in a box only 30 feet from
our house where
several seed feeders and heated bath are and where they fed
all winter long
with other birds. Box entrance faces east, toward the house.
Six other boxes
on our property, all further from house with no sign of bluebirds
or others.
On another note re: 12 gauge monofilament line-- placed 2 vertical,
taut
lines on both sides of the front of all 7 boxes. Seems to have
deterred HOSP
so far. I've seen a house finch sit on a house but never pay
attention to
the entrance. These strings never phased the EABLs. So far,
so good.
Nancy Bubb
P:219/632-4369
F:219/632-9018
bubbent"at"mixi.net
Date: Sat, 31 Mar 2001 09:20:21 -0400
From: Haleya Priest mablue"at"gis.net
Subject: Re: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Reply-To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Hi Nancy,
Yes, it sounds like the house sparrow (HOSP) may have gotten
to the bluebird (EABL) nest. I would watch that box to see who
goes in and out. I believe you might have something other than
a HOSP nest in the other box. HOSP nests are usually large,
messy and often with a canopy over top. They don't have any
order to their nest and often use a variety of things including
garbage, larger longer pieces of weeds, etc. It often seems
like a big heap of stuff.
Others may have other thoughts but what you describe actually
sounds like either a EABL nest or a tree swallow (TRES) or perhaps
some other cavity nester nest. I would watch carefully to see
who goes in and out of the box. As the grandfather of the monofilament
lines says, these are only temporary solutions to the HOSP problem.
They become used to the lines and then go for the box anyway.
You may need to consider the next line of action: trapping.
Here's great links to the information you'll be looking for.
I also recommend purchasing a book or two on bluebirds - Dorene
Scriven's is especially helpful and you will find her book on
the Bluebird REFERENCE GUIDE under favorite books. The BEST
OF listed below will have incredible info on discussions about
all aspects of dealing with HOSP control. Also Joe Huber's web
site: http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/HOUSESPARROWCONTROL
http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/RoostingBluebirds
You'll find all your bluebirding resources (including newbie
info) in
the Bluebird Reference Guide "at":
http://www.bluebird.htmlplanet.com or
http://www.crosswinds.net/~bluebirdguide/
AND:
The Best of Bluebird-L:
http://audubon-omaha.org/bbbox/bestofbbml/bblindx.htm
http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/HOUSESPARROWCONTROL
http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/RoostingBluebirds
Nancy Bubb wrote:
Harlan IN -- near Fort Wayne (northeast corner of Indiana)
Update on previous Message (below): I noticed bluebirds appear
to have
vacated their nest and are interested in another box just over
100 feet
away. This 2nd house has what I think is a sparrow's nest in
it
(monofilament line not working here anymore). I really don't
know how to ID
a sparrow's nest-- this nest is small, looks ready for eggs
and has a few
very small white feathers here and there inside it. The original
house
w/EABL nest is now being investigated by a male sparrow (monofilament
line
stopped working here too). I looked at the EABL nest inside
the first box
and discovered that the inside, rounded out part of the nest
was messed up--
probably by the sparrow. A swap of boxes for now. No eggs in
either yet.
I'll keep you posted. Glad I have several boxes available on
our property.
Hopefully one will serve as a permanent nest box for the bluebirds.
Nancy Bubb
Harlan Indiana
-----Original Message-----
From: bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com [mailto:bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com]On
Behalf Of Fawzi P. Emad
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2001 4:48 PM
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Subject: Re: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Nancy and all, please let us know where you are located. This
way we can
tell which birds are doing what and where... Thanks,
Fawzi from MD
----- Original Message -----
From: "Nancy Bubb" bubbent"at"mixi.net
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2001 3:04 PM
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Six EABLs throughout winter... now down to two (a pair). They
just
completed
a nest (hoping for 1st egg soon) in a box only 30 feet from
our house
where
several seed feeders and heated bath are and where they fed
all winter
long
with other birds. Box entrance faces east, toward the house.
Six other
boxes
on our property, all further from house with no sign of bluebirds
or
others.
On another note re: 12 gauge monofilament line-- placed 2 vertical,
taut
lines on both sides of the front of all 7 boxes. Seems to have
deterred
HOSP
so far. I've seen a house finch sit on a house but never pay
attention to
the entrance. These strings never phased the EABLs. So far,
so good.
Nancy Bubb
P:219/632-4369
F:219/632-9018
bubbent"at"mixi.net
From: "Nancy Bubb" bubbent"at"mixi.net
Date: Sat, 31 Mar 2001 10:32:01 -0500
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Reply-To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Just saw the female EABL enter the 2nd box with a mouthful
of nest material. And yes, HOSP have taken over, going inside
box #1. Should I remove the original BB nest from the box that
the HOSP have taken over? FYI: my husband attempted to shoot
the HOSP off of box #1 from our house porch but unfortunately
discovered his pellets only travel a distance of approx 15'.
I encouraged him to try again (we live rural). Thanks for the
suggested reading and websites re: bluebirds and other ideas
for HOSP control. I'll follow through on these.
Nancy Bubb
Harlan, Indiana
-----Original Message-----
From: bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com [mailto:bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com]On
Behalf Of Haleya Priest
Sent: Saturday, March 31, 2001 8:20 AM
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Subject: Re: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
...
Date: Sat, 31 Mar 2001 10:14:18 -0600
From: mybuffy mybuffy"at"primary.net
Subject: [bluebird] First Sighting of Yr.
Reply-To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
I just saw my first bluebird of the year. I have been watching,
till now, to no avail. I casually looked out my back window
and saw the familiar red breast. He was low to the ground, flitting
here and there (most probably a female in his view). I got my
mealworms from the fridge, gave out a whistle, and as I was
putting them in the feeder, the male EABL flew to my birdhouse
to check it out. I scared him away; but I know he will be back.
I am hanging my second nestbox this weekend!
SPRING IS HERE!!!!
Date: Sat, 31 Mar 2001 12:51:53 -0400
From: Haleya Priest mablue"at"gis.net
Subject: Re: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Reply-To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
HI Nancy - It is a toss up whether to remove the nest or not.
But I wouldn't stress to much over it. The main thing is to
kill or get the HOSP out of your yard. Advantages to removing
the nest are that if the nest isn't too messed up you can save
it for an emergency later on down the road. Also, it means the
HOSP have to work harder to make a full nest. Disadvantages
are that it might be good to keep the HOSP thinking they've
done this really nasty thing by taking over the box. I know
it sounds a little silly, but they can be so unpredictable,
it might be good to leave well enough alone just in case once
you remove the nest they think, "gees, this is boring -
the box is empty - let's go get the box they are in now."
Keeping the nest in the box might prevent the competitive hormones
from arising.
If your husband is willing to use a gun, boy I would focus
on that. Can he set up a blind? You can move the nest box a
few feet toward your house every few hours until you are close
enough to get a good shot. Or else invest in a shot gun - because
truth is you might need it down the road to avert these problems!
OR the other thing would be to put up an additional box near
to your house and see if the HOSP get attracted to that and
then use your air gun.... If you are absolutely
sure the HOSP have taken over here are some ideas of what to
do. Again, others will have different ideas to add to the pot.
You must be CERTAIN no bluebirds are coming to the box. Buy
some mouse sticky paper at your grocery or hardware store. Put
a whole piece of it in the box that the HOSP have taken over.
This MUST be while you can watch the box 100% of the time and
ready to bolt toward the box if a bluebird comes near it.
When the HOSP goes into the box they'll get stuck on the mouse
paper. Place the HOSP and sticky paper in a plastic bag and
whap it extremely hard against a cement or brick surface. This
will kill it almost instantly. Again, you have to make sure
to get the male as if his mate is killed, he'll still stay at
the box and call in a new mate. (Tis ok to get the female -
just that the male is the focus for HOSP control).
Hope this helps and keep us posted and keep asking questions!
:-) H
Nancy Bubb wrote:
Just saw the female EABL enter the 2nd box with a mouthful
of nest material.
...
From: "Wright, Merlin C." mcwrigh"at"nppd.com
Date: Mon, 2 Apr 2001 12:14:35 -0500
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Reply-To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
From your description, the nest with a few small white feathers
sounds like some of the bluebird nests I have seen. A house
sparrow nest 'always' has lots of feathers and has grasses that
stick up and flop over the top and usually contain seeds in
a few heads that hang down 'for a snack perhaps?'.
-----Original Message-----
From: Nancy Bubb [mailto:bubbent"at"mixi.net]
Sent: Saturday, March 31, 2001 6:42 AM
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Harlan IN -- near Fort Wayne (northeast corner of Indiana)
Update on previous Message (below): I noticed bluebirds appear
to have vacated their nest and are interested in another box
just over 100 feet away. This 2nd house has what I think is
a sparrow's nest in it (monofilament line not working here anymore).
I really don't know how to ID a sparrow's nest-- this nest is
small, looks ready for eggs and has a few very small white feathers
here and there inside it. The original house w/EABL nest is
now being investigated by a male sparrow (monofilament line
stopped working here too). I looked at the EABL nest inside
the first box and discovered that the inside, rounded out part
of the nest was messed up-- probably by the sparrow. A swap
of boxes for now. No eggs in either yet. I'll keep you posted.
Glad I have several boxes available on our property. Hopefully
one will serve as a permanent nest box for the bluebirds.
Nancy Bubb
Harlan Indiana
-----Original Message-----
From: bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com [mailto:bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com]On
Behalf Of Fawzi P. Emad
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2001 4:48 PM
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Subject: Re: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Nancy and all, please let us know where you are located. This
way we can tell which birds are doing what and where... Thanks,
Fawzi from MD
----- Original Message -----
From: "Nancy Bubb" bubbent"at"mixi.net
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2001 3:04 PM
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Six EABLs throughout winter... now down to two (a pair). They
just completed
a nest (hoping for 1st egg soon) in a box only 30 feet from
our house where
several seed feeders and heated bath are and where they fed
all winter long
with other birds. Box entrance faces east, toward the house.
Six other boxes
on our property, all further from house with no sign of bluebirds
or others.
On another note re: 12 gauge monofilament line-- placed 2 vertical,
taut
lines on both sides of the front of all 7 boxes. Seems to have
deterred HOSP
so far. I've seen a house finch sit on a house but never pay
attention to
the entrance. These strings never phased the EABLs. So far,
so good.
Nancy Bubb
P:219/632-4369
F:219/632-9018
bubbent"at"mixi.net
From: "Nancy Bubb" bubbent"at"mixi.net
Date: Mon, 2 Apr 2001 18:43:16 -0500
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Reply-To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Harlan IN
Thanks, Merlin. You're right. It's a bluebird nest. I've seen
the female bring nesting material to the box. Glad they're persistent
and building a new nest.
Nancy Bubb
P:219/632-4369
F:219/632-9018
bubbent"at"mixi.net
-----Original Message-----
From: bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com [mailto:bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com]On
Behalf Of Wright, Merlin C.
Sent: Monday, April 02, 2001 12:15 PM
To: 'bluebird"at"fsinc.com'
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
From your description, the nest with a few small white feathers
sounds like some of the bluebird nests I have seen. A house
sparrow nest 'always' has lots of feathers and has grasses that
stick up and flop over the top and usually contain seeds in
a few heads that hang down 'for a snack perhaps?'.
-----Original Message-----
From: Nancy Bubb [mailto:bubbent"at"mixi.net]
Sent: Saturday, March 31, 2001 6:42 AM
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Harlan IN -- near Fort Wayne (northeast corner of Indiana)
Update on previous Message (below): I noticed bluebirds appear
to have vacated their nest and are interested in another box
just over 100 feet away. This 2nd house has what I think is
a sparrow's nest in it (monofilament line not working here anymore).
I really don't know how to ID a sparrow's nest-- this nest is
small, looks ready for eggs and has a few very small white feathers
here and there inside it. The original house w/EABL nest is
now being investigated by a male sparrow (monofilament line
stopped working here too). I looked at the EABL nest inside
the first box and discovered that the inside, rounded out part
of the nest was messed up-- probably by the sparrow. A swap
of boxes for now. No eggs in either yet. I'll keep you posted.
Glad I have several boxes available on our property. Hopefully
one will serve as a permanent nest box for the bluebirds.
Nancy Bubb
Harlan Indiana
-----Original Message-----
From: bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com [mailto:bluebird-owner"at"fsinc.com]On
Behalf Of Fawzi P. Emad
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2001 4:48 PM
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Subject: Re: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Nancy and all, please let us know where you are located. This
way we can tell which birds are doing what and where... Thanks,
Fawzi from MD
----- Original Message -----
From: "Nancy Bubb" bubbent"at"mixi.net
To: bluebird"at"fsinc.com
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2001 3:04 PM
Subject: RE: [bluebird] Cavity Blues!!!!!
Six EABLs throughout winter... now down to two (a pair). They
just completed
a nest (hoping for 1st egg soon) in a box only 30 feet from
our house where
several seed feeders and heated bath are and where they fed
all winter long
with other birds. Box entrance faces east, toward the house.
Six other boxes
on our property, all further from house with no sign of bluebirds
or others.
On another note re: 12 gauge monofilament line-- placed 2 vertical,
taut
lines on both sides of the front of all 7 boxes. Seems to have
deterred HOSP
so far. I've seen a house finch sit on a house but never pay
attention to
the entrance. These strings never phased the EABLs. So far,
so good.
Nancy Bubb
P:219/632-4369
F:219/632-9018
bubbent"at"mixi.net
Date: Fri, 20 Apr 2001 18:06:19 EDT
From: SHbirder"at"aol.com
To: eorntig"at"acd.net, BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu, IWard"at"pmai.org
Subject: Egg gone! :(
Sherry Hunter, Byron Center, MI
I just checked my nestbox where there was a blue Eastern Bluebird
egg that was laid yesterday , April 19th. I was expecting
to see egg #2 but instead I found ZERO eggs.
Here is what I think happened. I was seeing a HOSP sitting
on the box and hanging on the entrance hole today in the rain.
I went and chased him away several times. I really think the
HOSP ate the eggs! because there is no evidence of any disturbance
to the nest and no eggs outside on the ground anywhere! And
as I watched out the window this evening there are no HOSP that
are trying to take over the two boxes? But as soon as the BB's
come around the HOSP are there by the nestboxes and Mr. BB chases
them away. :(
What does everyone think of the idea that maybe the HOSP eat
the bluebird eggs whole and that is why eggs that are missing
have no evidence of disturbance to the nest?
Date: Fri, 20 Apr 2001 22:47:15 -0400 (EDT)
From: hubertrap"at"webtv.net (Joe Huber)
To: SHbirder"at"aol.com, BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: Egg gone! :(
Hi Sherry, It seems very likely that the House sparrow is responsible
for the missing egg, but I suspect he took it out of the box
and dropped it. May be hard to locate the remains of the egg.
Now is the time to plan a method of sparrow control to prevent
worse damage in the future.
Joe Huber Venice Fl.
Charter member NABS, Charter member OBS, Life member OBS Joe
Huber
hubertrap"at"webtv.net
http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/HOUSESPARROWCONTROL
http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/RoostingBluebirds
Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2001 09:21:56 -0500
From: "Pauline Tom" bluebirds"at"austin.rr.com
To: "BLUEBIRD-L" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Do HOSP remove entire nest?
Pauline Tom
Mountain City (no mountains) TX
South Central Texas
GORGEOUS day
A Bewick's Wren nest that had 4 hatchlings and 4 hatching eggs
one week ago is missing from a PVC house mounted on 10' conduit.
In its place is a complete House Sparrow nest.
I've seen House Sparrow nests on top of another species' nest.
Do they also have history of removing the entire nest from the
cavity?
Nearby is a PVC nest box with 3 newly hatched Eastern Bluebirds.
I'm trying the "pairing" concept - leaving the HOSP
nest in hopes that the sparrow does not destroy the bluebirds.
I'll take preventative measures to ensure no HOSP leave the
nest.
Thanks!
From: "Marian Coiley" mcoiley"at"triad.rr.com
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
Subject: Bluebird house problem
Date: Sat, 29 Sep 2001 23:31:34 -0400
I'm hoping someone can help with this question. We have a bluebird
house on a post about 5 feet off the ground, about 6 feet from
our house in an area with feeders and a birdbath. The bluebird
hole had a predator guard on it which was partially missing
(from a year or two before). There was a nest of baby
bluebirds in it and we enjoyed listening to them each
time they were fed. Then after they were perhaps 2 weeks old,
we noticed another bird on top of the bluebird house and
the birds inside were dead. I'm not sure if a bird did this.
We don't often see stray cats and never have seen them in this
area and have never seen racoons around. Any suggestions?
Marian
From: hubertrap"at"webtv.net (Joe Huber)
Date: Sun, 30 Sep 2001 08:34:13 -0400 (EDT)
To: mcoiley"at"triad.rr.com, BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
Subject: Re: Bluebird house problem
HI Marian, Since the Racoon or a cat generally pulls nesting
material out the entrance hole, you can just about rule them
out on this case. With dead babies in the nest and another bird
on top the box it sounds like house sparrow trouble. They kill
the babies and nest looks ok. With dead babies the adult Bluebirds
will leave. Check the young Bluebirds for signs of pecking about
their heads. This nest is finished with dead babies, so remove
contents of box. TO late this year for another nesting. You
need to learn to identify other birds in case there are future
problems. You have all winter to decide on a method of prevention
against the HOSP. Read all the information you can find to help
you decide what method you want to try. Being aware of the problem
is the first step in finding a solution that suits you. This
is not a happy way to end the season but HOSP can do that. Hope
you have better luck next year. Be sure to try something because
the HOSP will return. Best Wishes Joe Huber Venice Fl.
Charter member NABS, Charter member OBS, Life member OBS Joe
Huber hubertrap"at"webtv.net
http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/HOUSESPARROWCONTROL
http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/RoostingBluebirds
27.1171494 N Lo -82.4124222 W
From: KCBSP"at"aol.com
Date: Sun, 30 Sep 2001 12:23:17 EDT
Subject: Re: BLUEBIRD-L digest 985
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
In a Message dated 9/30/2001 12:15:02 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu writes:
I'm hoping someone can help with this question. We have a bluebird
house
on a post about 5 feet off the ground, about 6 feet from our
house in an
area with feeders and a birdbath. The bluebird hole had a predator
guard
on it which was partially missing (from a year or two before).
There was
a nest of baby bluebirds in it and we enjoyed listening to them
each time
they were fed. Then after they were perhaps 2 weeks old, we
noticed
another bird on top of the bluebird house and the birds inside
were dead.
I'm not sure if a bird did this. We don't = often see stray
cats and
never have seen them in this area and have never seen racoons
around.
Kathy Clark, New Cumberland, PA
Were the baby birds heads pecked? Was the bird brown with a
black bib? This bird is called a English House Sparrow. They
will kill the bluebirds and other birds that use your nest box.
Familiarize yourself with the different birds that use the nest
boxes, and if you have seen the House Sparrow on your box (HOSP)
they will keep returning. They are not a native species and
a nuisance. Please let us know if the baby birds were pecked.
Date: Sun, 10 Feb 2002 16:20:20 -0800
From: Linda Violett lviolett"at"earthlink.net
To: "Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu" (BLUEBIRD-L) Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: fighting bluebirds
Linda Violett - Yorba Linda, Calif.
For those who have actually witnessed sparrows make an attack
or attempt a nestbox takeover, can you describe exactly what
occurred? Any little details might provide us with clues. What
events led up to the attack as well as the actual attack and
timing.
On nestbox takeovers, do sparrows simply pester the bluebirds
away?
During killing attacks, does one sparrow (male?) sit in the
hole and block the exit before leaping in for the kill? Or do
both the female and male synchronize their efforts in a takeover
or an attack? Do both bluebirds of a pair try to defend the
box? Do bluebirds seem weaker than sparrows or does it appear
bluebirds just give up the fight more easily?
"Pauline, Mountain City TX" wrote:
I
recently watched a bluebird on a nestbox attacked by a house
sparrow
and a mockingbird. ...
Date: Sun, 10 Feb 2002 16:46:15 -0800
From: Linda Violett lviolett"at"earthlink.net
To: "Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu" (BLUEBIRD-L) Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: PS: fighting bluebirds
Linda Violett - Yorba Linda, Calif.
PS: For those with info on sparrow attacks and nestbox takeovers
. . . I'm not interested in sparrows attacking nestlings or
eggs. I'm looking for details on adult sparrow vs. adult bluebird
behaviors.
"Pauline, Mountain City TX" wrote:
I
recently watched a bluebird on a nestbox attacked by a house
sparrow
Date: Sun, 10 Feb 2002 21:07:31 -0500
From: Pamela Ford jpford"at"comcast.net
Subject: RE: fighting bluebirds
To: lviolett"at"earthlink.net, Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
Linda,
While I have lost a nesting female bluebird to what appeared
to be a house sparrow attack I didn't personally witness the
killing. I have, however, witnessed many (at least 30) battles
where a house sparrows tries to take over a nestbox. What I
have seen has always been initiated by the male house sparrow.
He will try to land on the bluebird's nestbox and the two male
birds end up in a physical tangle, many times rolling on the
grass, holding on with the claws and pecking at each other.
It's been surprising to me that the smaller house sparrow almost
always comes out on top. The male bluebird usually flies off
a ways after two or three rounds with the sparrow, but returns
to fight again. Until he does, the male house sparrow sings
an enthusiatic song from the top of the nestbox (is it a victory
song?). I have seen the females of both species occasionally
join in, usually after the males are on the ground.
In each case where I have observed this, I have intervened
after observing the bluebird losing a few times. The house sparrow
is much more wary of people and usually flies away from the
area when I appear out of the house, while the bluebirds remain.
The sparrow will return though, until trapped.
I look forward to hearing others' accounts.
Pam in Harford County, Maryland
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu [mailto:owner-BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu]On
Behalf Of Linda Violett
Sent: Sunday, February 10, 2002 7:20 PM
To: Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
Subject: Re: fighting bluebirds
...
Date: Sun, 10 Feb 2002 22:42:44 -0800
From: Linda Violett lviolett"at"earthlink.net
To: "Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu" (BLUEBIRD-L) Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: fighting bluebirds
Linda Violett - Yorba Linda, Calif.
Thanks to both Pam and Pauline for describing what they witnessed
during sparrow vs. bluebird nestbox battles. Both accounts describe
battles that take place outside the nestbox.
I am interested in receiving additional details (off list if
others aren't interested). I have seen a bluebird take its foot
and pin another bluebird's neck to the ground during a mealworm
squabble. Do bluebirds try to use this head-hold on sparrows
during a nestbox fight? It is my understanding sparrows try
latch onto the back of its opponent's neck. Has anyone seen
a sparrow approach an entrance hole in preparation for an attack
on an incubating female? Doesn't the female bluebird cry for
help? Where's her mate? Where's the sparrow's mate?
Pamela Ford wrote:
Linda,
While I have lost a nesting female bluebird to what appeared
to be a
house sparrow attack I didn't personally witness the killing.
I have,
however, witnessed many (at least 30) battles where a house
sparrows
tries to take over a nestbox. What I have seen has always been
initiated by the male house sparrow. He will try to land on
the
bluebird's nestbox and the two male birds end up in a physical
tangle,
many times rolling on the grass, holding on with the claws and
pecking
at each other. It's been surprising to me that the smaller house
sparrow almost always comes out on top.
I look forward to hearing others' accounts.
Pam in Harford County, Maryland
Date: Mon, 11 Feb 2002 10:35:30 -0400
From: Haleya Priest mablue"at"gis.net
To: lviolett"at"earthlink.net
CC: "Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)" Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: fighting bluebirds
Haleya Priest Amherst MA
Linda, Two attempted HOSP attacks come to mind. IN my yard,
I have some well established tough EABL. Any time a HOSP comes
near they attack the HOSPs. I don't worry too much about these
EABL, however, I still trap any HOSP. When the EABL fledge their
babies and leave the box empty for a few days, HOSP usually
come check the box out. This is the only time I see the HOSP
really nearby.
On one other occasion I witnessed a rogue male HOSP attack
a TRES nest. I drove up just as the HOSP was leaving the nest.
I watched for the next 15 minutes as he repeatedly went to the
box and went in the box. Each time about 8 TRES were circling
the box and trying to attack him, but he was absolutely unintimidated
by them. He seemed to have one focus and that was to enter the
box and kill the babies. Which he succeeded at. The TRES just
could not stop
him! H
Linda Violett wrote:
Linda Violett - Yorba Linda, Calif.
For those who have actually witnessed sparrows make an attack
or
...
Date: Tue, 12 Feb 2002 08:58:20 -0800
From: "Virginia Nufer" nuferv"at"ohsu.edu
To: Bluebird-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L), lviolett"at"earthlink.net
Subject: Re: fighting bluebirds
Portland, Oregon, USA
Not Bluebirds but related: I've seen a male House Sparrow land
at the entrance hole, reach in and pull the male Violet-Green
Swallow out! I have never seen HOSP actually enter this particular
box, the oblong slot is even a narrow fit for the swallows,
but that hasn't prevented the sparrows from trying. (I'm worried
about this year as I haven't been able to get a decoy for my
traps; usually I've caught one in a nestbox trap by this time.
There's a 30+ strong flock out there...ARRG!)
Marsie Nufer
Linda Violett lviolett"at"earthlink.net 02/10 10:42 PM
Linda Violett - Yorba Linda, Calif.
...
Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2002 18:45:22 -0000
From: "madelineincalifornia" madbrushpainter"at"netzero.net
Subject: Male House Sparrow
I have noticed some male House Sparrows at my "Peanut
Butter Suet Log Feeder from time to time...not everyday, but
once in awhile. They really seem to like the suet along with
many other birds. I don't know what to do to discourage them
as I worry about the Bluebirds when they nest. I have had two
male and one female bluebirds checking out the houses in my
yard since January. The other day we found a dead male Bluebird
in one of the houses. Since, now there only seems to be one
male Bluebird coming around, assume it was one of the two that
have been here since January. Do any of you have an idea on
what could have happened? Could a House Sparrow have killed
him? The other male Bluebird couldn't have done that...would
he?
Mad
Folsom, CA (Sacramento County)
Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2002 21:06:01 -0000
From: "jenniferswi" jhoffman"at"sal.wisc.edu
Subject: Re: Male House Sparrow
Good to hear from you, Mad! Did you look closely at the dead
bluebird? Did he have any injuries or was he bloody at all?
Wounds on the head or eyes are a good indicator of a house sparrow
attack. In this case, you might also find signs of a struggle
in the box, especially feathers pulled out. If he's unmarked
and the box is clean, he may have simply died of natural causes.
I don't think male bluebirds normally fight each other to the
death, even during mating season.
I know this would be hard to do, but if the house sparrows
are eating your suet, I think I would advise not putting out
suet while the bluebirds are nesting. If you feed seed, switch
to safflower only (which the sparrows don't like as much). That
should cut down on the sparrow population in your yard and help
keep your bluebirds safe!
Date: Fri, 01 Mar 2002 02:06:20 -0000
From: "madelineincalifornia" madbrushpainter"at"netzero.net
Subject: Re Male House Sparrow
Thanks Jennifer!
No there was no sign of blood or feathers and the house was
clean. That makes me feel better that he was probably not killed
by another Bluebird...they are such sweet and gentle birds!
It had entered my mind that he could not get out of the box
for some reason and therefore perished. I guess this would be
a good time to start the mealworms for the Bluebirds in their
own feeder!
Mad
From: "Phil Berry" mrtony8"at"mchsi.com
To: "BLUEBIRD CORNELL" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: HOSP 2; EABL 0.
Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 16:15:02 -0600
This afternoon while finsihing the installation of temp monitors
on my trail I opened the door on a new box (up one week) and
a dead male EABL lying on the floor. His head was featherless,
otherwise no damage. Is this the work of HOSP? If so, I am taking
Thursday to install monofilament line on every one of my boxes.
This is the second dead EABL this Spring, the first was a female,
about two weeks or so ago. I am sick. I can't stand to see this
kind of thing happen. Whatever the cause, I MUST stop it!!!
Until I lost my first EABL to HOSP, I would never have imagined
I could kill anything. After the first time this happened, and
HOSP used the feathers to build a nest, I could torture the
little rats. On that note, does anyone have an idea on how I
can use the monofilament line on the door of a NABS style box,
front opening, with the bottom hinged door (opens from the top).
I can't see how to string the line across the front, the door
won't open then. I am thinking of using one piece on each side
(of the front, on the frame), then stringing two vertical lines
on the door itself. How can I get a line across the door? They
say one pic is worth a thousand words. I have pics from the
archives to use, but the unit uses a side door. In closing,
I am mad as H*** and I am not going to take it any more!!!!
Phil Berry
Gulf Breeze, Florida
Date: Tue, 05 Mar 2002 20:01:56 -0400
From: Haleya Priest mablue"at"gis.net
To: mrtony8"at"mchsi.com
CC: BLUEBIRD CORNELL BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: HOSP 2; EABL 0.
Haleya Priest Amherst MA
Dear Phil, So sorry about your EABL. It sure sounds like a
HOSP attack to me. They are ruthless and deadly and they especially
like going for the head and eyes.... a bald head or parts of
the head is pretty much the work of a HOSP. I've also seen damage
(balding) to other parts of the body, but the head and eyes
are primary targets. :-(
I haven't used monofilament as yet, but I would like to remind
all bluebirders that if you protect a box from HOSP via monofilament,
most likely that HOSP is going to head for another box and kill
an EABL somewhere else!
So make sure if you use monofilament or any other HOSP deterrent
you also trap!!!! :-) H
Phil Berry wrote:
This afternoon while finsihing the installation of temp monitors
on
...
From: "Keith & Sandy Kridler" kridler"at"1starnet.com
To: "BLUEBIRD-L" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: losing eggs, or adult birds
Date: Wed, 6 Mar 2002 08:10:19 -0600
Keith Kridler Mt. Pleasant, Texas
For those who have House Sparrows/Starlings and native cavity
nesters we are going to see survival of the strongest. Starlings
evict MOST species of cavity nesters from flicker sized birds
on down. They don't normally kill adult birds, they physically
drag the adults out of the cavity but toss out eggs, young and
the nesting material, killing these young birds in the process
and this to me describes a PREDATOR.
House Sparrows on the other hand will sometimes kill other
adult birds along with tossing out eggs or killing young birds.
Normally when you see the back of the head of a native cavity
nester severely pecked, a house Sparrow calling or going into
the box then you can probably blame the sparrow.
When eggs disappear you need to do detective work! If the entrance
hole is large enough for a starling to enter or reach into a
nest cup close to the entrance hole it makes pinning the blame
more difficult because magpies and several other species could
also be to blame. Even Red-headed woodpeckers have been seen
feeding their young the young birds of other species when insects
were scarce!
If House Wrens are singing near the box then remember on AVERAGE
it takes a wren 7 seconds per egg to empty a nest! House Sparrows
and Starlings also remove eggs or young and can probably be
as quick. Flying squirrels will also eat eggs (I opened a box
early one morning and caught one actually eating one) or young
birds.
Rats and weasels if they can climb the pole will enter boxes
and eat the contents. Mice will kill and eat young birds usually
starting with feet/legs or wings, they may possibly also be
an egg eater in the right circumstances. When trapping rodents
at our campsite rats and mice prefer fish or red meat to any
type of vegetable matter or other people food.
We hope you are using guards to protect mounting poles against
most climbing predators if they are a problem in your area!
We will see many more losses to House Sparrows as the season
continues and these birds CAN be trapped out of areas IF you
use enough trap boxes as flocks of sparrows tend to use fairly
small "home" areas and will stay in a "safe"
roost or their own area all summer IF they have enough food,
water, roost sites and nesting areas. When they are continually
driven from an area in early spring they will move to where
they feel safe!
Sparrows tend to move from a populated colony to surrounding
areas so once an area is cleared of most sparrows some trapping
of them will continue through out the breeding season. VARY
the box type, size, mounting height and even color of some of
your nestboxes! If you are going to be trapping then place perches
on the trap boxes! Linda Violett can post about her efforts
at finding a solution to this problem.
Share what works for you and what doesn't! Even if a solution
only works for a year in an area it could make a LOT of difference.
KK
From: "Bill Darnell" bdarnel3"at"bellsouth.net
To: kridler"at"1starnet.com, "BLUEBIRD-L" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: losing eggs, or adult birds
Date: Wed, 6 Mar 2002 08:37:26 -0600
According to many Martin landlords who have witnessed Starling
depredation, they usually go for the eyes of the Martin, and
probably stabbing into the brain. Of course, the killing is
done in the cavity.
My opinion is we should never relent in killing house sparrows
and starlings!
Bill Darnell
Savannah, TN
Keith Kridler Mt. Pleasant, Texas
For those who have House Sparrows/Starlings and native cavity
...
From: "Pauline, Mountain City TX" bluebirds"at"austin.rr.com
To: "BLUEBIRD-L" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: losing eggs, or adult birds / Add hole restrictor
for smaller nesting birds
Date: Wed, 6 Mar 2002 09:52:21 -0600
Yesterday I found this season's first two eggs destroyed by
a House Sparrow ... right out my bedroom door, smashed on the
wood deck amidst some of the parent' s feathers . The voice
of one of the parents (Bewick's Wren; pronounced "Buicks")
in a nearby tree was frantic.
This morning I eye-witnessed the House Sparrow entering the
hole again and frightened him away, but I can't stand at the
door all day.
In the "survival of the fittest", the House Sparrow
will be the winner unless we intervene (this includes trapping
and destroying House Sparrow and protecting smaller species
with smaller entrance holes - and even refraining from feeding
common mixed seed which contains millet which attracts House
Sparrows). Our native birds have not had time to evolve in ways
to withstand the House Sparrow's attacks - he was brought to
this continent less than 150 years ago.
If the nest above my back deck had been in a "nestbox",
I might have added a hole restrictor when the little Bewick's
Wrens nested in order to keep House Sparrows out. But, this
nesting was in one of the "birdhouses" I had chosen
to keep. (Adorable house - a triangle shaped face. Birds enter
through nostril holes. It usually brings roars of laughter around
my house ... but not today.)
There has been a House Sparrow ground trap beside the deck,
but the sparrow hasn't been interested in it .... yet.
Pauline Tom
Mountain City (no mountains) TX
www.texasbluebirdsociety.org
----- Original Message -----
From: Keith & Sandy Kridler
To: BLUEBIRD-L
Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2002 8:10 AM
Subject: losing eggs, or adult birds
...
Date: Thu, 21 Mar 2002 22:47:51 -0500
From: "Kimberly Putnam" kputnam"at"sc.rr.com
Subject: bluebird's nesting?I
I live in central SC, and have had several bluebirds coming
to my feeder....I found scraps of paper in my house which I
prompltly removed. Today I saw a leaf sticking out the entrance,
upon investigation I found several small feathers (grey with
little white). At first I thought they were blue, and got excited..
I have no idea what bluebirds make their nest outof...Is it
possilbe that I Just might get a couple in my house?
They are coming on a regular basis, usually around 6am, and
again around 4pm...Think they wait for me to put out the worms.
putput
Date: Fri, 22 Mar 2002 14:23:13 -0000
From: "jj2939730" jjsmith"at"traceroad.net
Subject: Re: bluebird's nesting?I
Hi Putput,
The BB's in my area(MS) build their nest out of dried grass
and pine straw. They use dried grass mostly. Not sure, but your
nest could have been House Sparrows-If you have them around.
The BB nest is a much neater nest than Hp.It is a little early
here for BB's to nest. Sparrows usually nest earlier than they
do. I do have one BB nest with two eggs, but last year it was
March 31st before they nested. Years earlier it was around the
first of April. Don't give up on them, yet. Even if they don't
nest the first go around, they may nest the second. Good luck.
Jeanette
-- In bluebirdtrail"at"y..., "Kimberly Putnam" kputnam"at"s...
wrote:
I live in central SC, and have had several bluebirds coming
to my feeder....I found scraps of paper in my house which I
prompltly removed. Today I saw a leaf sticking out the entrance,
upon investigation I found several small feathers (grey with
little white). At first I thought they were blue, and got excited..
I have no idea what bluebirds make their nest outof...Is it
possilbe that I Just might get a couple in my house?
They are coming on a regular basis, usually around 6am, and
again around 4pm...Think they wait for me to put out the worms.
putput
Date: Fri, 22 Mar 2002 17:18:38 -0000
From: "ruby_tuesday_sw_wi" ruby-tuesday"at"wi.rr.com
Subject: Re: bluebird's nesting?I
Kimberly...I agree about removing those paper scraps from your
boxes as that sounds like a HOSP from what I have read. As far
as those feathers...I wonder if they are a sign that a (TRES)
tree swallow pair has laid claim to your box??? This is only
my second season of birding but I read that the tree swallows
use feathers in their nests. Also, I read that these birds can
usually be found where one might expect to see bluebirds with
both species living almost side by side in harmony. If this
is the case...how lucky for you to have 2 of the lovliest birds
checking out your site!!! Hopefully, someone with more experience
can advise you about those feathers. Meanwhile...please keep
us posted as to what happens at your place.
Renee SW Wisconsin
From: "Bill & Dot Forrester" forreste"at"ptdprolog.net
To: "bluebird-l" bluebird-l"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Are you SURE that's a house sparrow???
Date: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 10:47:16 -0500
Hi all,
This is just a gentle reminder to everyone, especially new
birders, to properly ID a bird before destroying it or its nest.
There are many sparrows and sparrow look-alikes which do no
harm to bluebirds, so you really need to know exactly what a
house sparrow (HOSP) looks like, especially the male with his
black throat patch. Other similar birds do indeed go into ground
traps - my Hav-a-Hart chipmunk trap used to catch house finches,
white-throated sparrows, goldfinches, chickadees, and once a
cardinal. Even traps in boxes are now likely to catch beneficial
species. The drastic explosion of mealworm feeders has unfortunately
taught many non-cavity nesters that it sometimes pays to enter
a nest box cavity in search of mealworms. Goldfinches seem to
be the most commonly seen in this situation, and a winter goldfinch
or spring female can look very much like a "sparrow"
to beginners. And as Keith pointed out in an earlier post, song
sparrows once nested in boxes and may still try one of yours.
Even the small brownish wren can be mistaken for an enemy (sometimes
they are a serious problem but are a protected species). Peace
of mind and less worrying and stress are a direct result of
knowing your birds well enough to be absolutely certain that
your intruder is *really* the dreaded HOSP.
Dot (PA near Allentown)
From: Shane Marcotte marco50"at"bellsouth.net
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
Subject: Sparrows
Date: Sun, 31 Mar 2002 21:15:40 -0500
Hello All,
Are any other Sparrows threats to BBs besides HOSP?Are other
Sparrows second cavity nesters?
Shane in Watson Louisiana
From: "Fawzi P. Emad femad <at> fpemad <dot> com
To: marco50"at"bellsouth.net, "BLUEBIRD-L" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: Sparrows
Date: Mon, 1 Apr 2002 07:48:23 -0500
Hi Shane. All other sparrows are native sparrows and pose no
threat to the Bluebirds. Most sparrows are also great song birds
(unlike the HOSP which merely chirps away.) One has to be careful
not to mix the HOSP (House Sparrow) with a native Sparrow, they
look very much alike. This is why the HOSP was named a sparrow
when in fact it is a weaver finch. Make sure you can identify
the HOSP. The male HOSP is easiest to recognize, the female
HOSP is a little harder to distinguish, but with observation,
one's ability improves. I learned how to identify these birds
by looking at the bird guidebooks I have.
Fawzi
Fawzi Emad in Laytonsville, Maryland
femad"at"comcast.net
----- Original Message -----
From: "Shane Marcotte" marco50"at"bellsouth.net
To: "BLUEBIRD-L" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Sent: Sunday, March 31, 2002 9:15 PM
Subject: Sparrows
Hello All,
Are any other Sparrows threats to BBs besides HOSP?Are other
Sparrows second cavity nesters?
Shane in Watson Louisiana
Date: Mon, 01 Apr 2002 07:50:50 -0600
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
From: Kate Oschwald bbnestbox"at"1starnet.com
Subject: Re: Sparrows
At 09:15 PM 3/31/02 -0500, Shane Marcotte wrote:
Hello All,
Are any other Sparrows threats to BBs besides HOSP?Are other
Sparrows second cavity nesters?
Shane in Watson Louisiana
I have read only once about a song sparrow using a nestbox.
Any sparrows other than house sparrows are generally not considered
a threat to bluebirds.
Kate Oschwald
Paris, TX
100 mi NE of Dallas
33.6853N 95.6293W
From: "Keith & Sandy Kridler" kridler"at"1starnet.com
To: "BLUEBIRD-L" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re:nest identification
Date: Tue, 2 Apr 2002 06:40:52 -0600
Keith Kridler
When in doubt about what is building in a nestbox be sure and
wait! There can be huge differences it types and styles of "bluebird
nests" depending on the material available and the experience
of the female! I would think that if we gave 12 women on this
list the same material and sewing equipment that NONE of the
dresses would look the same:-)))
Seriously it sounds like you might have House Sparrows trying
to take over a bluebird nest. Be sure to have an extra box or
two in the area and watch whenever you can to see who is in
control of the box. There is no hurry to remove a nest as if
the sparrows are building they can rebuild in a couple of hours,
same goes for the bluebirds, but they also might move on down
the road. Keep us posted. KK
From: "Bill & Dot Forrester" forreste"at"ptdprolog.net
To: "bluebird-l" bluebird-l"at"cornell.edu
Subject: shooting every bird near your nest box? I'm SCARED!
Date: Tue, 2 Apr 2002 08:22:34 -0500
Hi all,
Since I posted my "Are you SURE it's a house sparrow?"
note, I have had 11 different people contact me privately. All
of them are apparently shooting any sparrow-like bird that comes
anywhere near their nestbox, and this is extremely frightening.
Many birds will sit near or on a nest box with no harmful effects.
I beg all of you to go to our RefGuide, posted each week, and
look at the photo of the male house sparrow (HOSP) and listen
to his cheeps. If this site is not available to you, go to the
nearest Home Depot or McDonalds fast food place, where there
will be tons of HOSP to see and hear. I am not trying to attack
these people, because every single one of them is trying hard
to protect his bluebirds. Each one is so worried about possible
HOSP attacks that he does not seem to be enjoying any pleasure
from his nesting bluebirds. But we just *cannot* shoot anything
that looks vaguely like a HOSP. Just before we moved to PA last
fall, one of my neighbors proudly showed me the HOSP her husband
had just shot off their (empty) nest box. It was an early tree
sparrow. To top it off, one of their neighbors reported them
to the local police for firing a BB gun in a residential back
yard. These were perfectly nice people who love bluebirds, but
I was so saddened at this unnecessary death that I felt sick
inside. We are all bluebird lovers here and presumably care
about other birds and wildlife in general, so it is our responsibility
to be absolutely certain that we are not destroying beneficial
birds. Please get into your bluebird landlording with restraint
and knowledge, so that our native bird population is not being
decimated by mistake. Our birds have enough problems in the
world today without being killed by bird lovers. Thanks for
listening.
Dot (PA near Allentown)
From: "FeatheredFriends" FeatheredFriends"at"att.net
To: "BLUEBIRD-L" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Eggs out of Nestbox
Date: Tue, 16 Apr 2002 11:11:56 -0500
Good morning all,
I'm new to the list (just sighed up today) but am in my 3rd
year with a bluebird nestbox, am no expert by any means and
am seeking some insight. My bluebird pair successfully started
their nest and had two eggs layed. On the third day, upon inspection
of the box, I found the nest empty, but the box was still secure
(shut). I found the two eggs very nearby on the ground - each
had a hole pierced in it but the contents of the egg remained.
Upon further inspection of the nest,,,there were (what seemed
like) hundreds of ants under the nest. My questions are: 1)
what predator got the eggs out of the nest without opening the
box? the ants!? 2) what should I do about the ants 3) will the
pair return to this nest and re-lay eggs,,,or should I clean
the box out? (They were present while I discovered the ants
and watching closely).
I've never experienced this problem in the past years.
Thanks for the help.
Debbie Rosenberger
Mid-TN
Date: Tue, 16 Apr 2002 11:48:41 -0500
To: bluebird-l"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
From: "Tracy L. Powell" tlp01"at"uark.edu
Subject: Re: Eggs out of Nestbox
Sounds like house wrens. I had my first experience with them
this past weekend. A house wren threw out six baby carolina
chickadees. So yes, house wrens WILL kill nestlings. I decided
house wrens will not be allowed to nest in nestboxes in my yard.
I closed the entrance holes. Many say to grease the pole to
prevent ants. I use Raid on the base of the poles in SW Ark.
where we have fire ants.
At 11:11 AM 4/16/02 -0500, you wrote:
Good morning all,
I'm new to the list (just sighed up today) but am in my 3rd
year with a
...
Tracy Powell
Fayetteville, Arkansas
"Nothing spurs one's inspiration more than necessity..."
Gioachino Rossini
From: "D. H. Snook" dhsnook"at"sssnet.com
To: FeatheredFriends"at"att.net
Cc: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
Subject: Re: Eggs out of Nestbox
Date: Tue, 16 Apr 2002 13:15:47 -0400
It sounds like House Wrens (HOWR). Were there any small sticks
in the nest? The male HOWR makes "dummy" nests in
numerous cavities. The female then makes the final choice of
which nest to take. The male HOWR is a nasty dude, killing chicks,
throwing them out of the nest, and breaking eggs.
The nest is probably fouled from the poked eggs, hence the
ants. I would clean out the box and remove the nest. If the
Eastern Blue Birds (EABL) are still around, they may re-nest.
A good product to keep ants out of the box is Tangle Foot.
Use a tooth brush to apply an inch or so around the base of
the post/pole. Most garden stores carry this product.
www.tanglefoot.com
Doug Snook
D. H. Snook/Sondra R. Snook
Canal Fulton, OH 44614 (NE Quadrant)
40:53N 81:35W
----- Original Message -----
From: "FeatheredFriends" FeatheredFriends"at"att.net
To: "BLUEBIRD-L" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Sent: Tuesday, April 16, 2002 12:11 PM
Subject: Eggs out of Nestbox
...
From: "C & G Statton" statton"at"toolcity.net
To: BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
Subject: Re: Eggs out of Nestbox
Date: Tue, 16 Apr 2002 15:59:22 -0400
Chris Statton
NW PA
Debbie ... I'd agree that it would likely be house wrens with
the egg "pierced". (House sparrows usually just peck
or toss.) Doug Snook's mention of the spilling of some contents
of one or both eggs may well be the attractant for the ants
under the nest.
I have one concern about pulling the nest immediately. Blues
can lay 1 egg on up to 6 in a clutch. So, your female blue may
not be done laying. If the nest is pulled and she has more eggs,
she may lay them on the bare box floor. Only my opinion, I'd
brush out the ants totally - even get them out of the nest (totally)
and put the nest back in for a day or so. This, only to see
if the female has more eggs she needs to lay. If she does lay
more eggs, then I'd replace the soiled nest with another nest
(saved from previous years). If she doesn't lay more eggs over
the next couple of days, then pull the nest.
A ring of lithium grease or other ant-deterrent on the pole
is excellent to keep them from coming back. (If your pole is
an open pipe, the pipe might need capped to keep ants from coming
up the inside of the pole.)
Of course, at the same time, the predator is a problem, too.
Is your box out in the open? If it is close to a tree line,
it might need gradually moved away from the tree line. ("Gradually"
quickly enough to disinterest the wren, slowly enough to not
confuse the blues ... a judgement call. If the blues lay no
more eggs, the box may just be moved.)
Date: Tue, 16 Apr 2002 15:44:42 -0500
To: FeatheredFriends"at"att.net, "BLUEBIRD-L" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
From: Kate Oschwald bbnestbox"at"1starnet.com
Subject: Re: Eggs out of Nestbox
At 11:11 AM 4/16/02 -0500, FeatheredFriends wrote:
Good morning all,
I'm new to the list (just sighed up today) but am in my 3rd
year with a
...
I don't know if you have house wrens where you are, but that's
what is sounds like to me. They pierce the egg to remove it
from the nest, but don't necessarily eat it. The presence of
the ants may have been a coincidence, or perhaps they were drawn
to the broken egg, some of which may have gotten on the nest
material in the box.
Since the female is in the process of laying eggs, she needs
a nest right now. If you believe there is sticky egg material
on the nest, and you feel you should clean out the nestbox,
you could attempt to fashion a nest for her out of dry grass
(not green wet grass), so she doesn't have to lay her remaining
eggs in a dirty nest or on the bare wood of the nestbox. Some
people keep an old (unsoiled) nest from previous years for just
such an emergency.
Others on this list will have advice as well.
Kate Oschwald
Paris, TX
100 mi NE of Dallas
33.6853N 95.6293W
From: "JD" ds"at"comteck.com
To: "BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.ed" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Nest Problem...Help
Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2002 13:10:00 -0500
My female Bluebird just started laying her eggs just this week.
The first egg was laid on April 24th, second one on April 25th,
then on April 26th she didn't lay any eggs. Then today I go
to check on things I felt only 1 egg then I looked in (nestbox
is a little taller than me) I seen an egg outside of the nest.
I felt something is wrong when I looked at it it has 2 puncture
holes in it. Now I don't have any HOSP around nor any House
Wrens besides the box is out in the open. Prior to the BB's
even building their nest the Female Cowbird has landed on the
roof of the box.
My question is do I leave the egg in the box or just take it
out? I just went ahead & put it back in the nest as I don't
know what to do.
Also, 1 time when I checked the box this week the male BB attacked
me before I started to leave the nestbox. At the time I found
it odd bc he has never done that to me before. But now it is
making sense as I am thinking the Fem. Cowbird as probably been
trying to do this all week.
The BB's didn't take to the other nestbox I have that last
years BB's nested succesfully.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Joleen in Indiana
From: hubertrap"at"webtv.net (Joe Huber)
Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2002 15:19:47 -0400 (EDT)
To: ds"at"comteck.com, BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu (BLUEBIRD-L)
Subject: Re: Nest Problem...Help
Hi Joleen and all, holes poked in eggs are generally caused
by House Wrens, but it is possible a HOSP has done that. I really
don't think the Cow bird Did it since all she wants to do is
enter any lay eggs with the others. Since these bluebird eggs
are punctured you may as well remove them as they won't hatch.
There is a chance the BLuebirds will start again and lay new
eggs as long as no other problems develop. Let every one know
what happens
next. Good Birding Joe Huber Venice Fl.
Charter member NABS, Charter member OBS, Life member OBS Joe
Huber hubertrap"at"webtv.net
http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/HOUSESPARROWCONTROL
http://community.webtv.net/hubertrap/RoostingBluebirds
27.1171494 N Lo -82.4124222 W
He who ask a question is stupid for five minutes, He who never
ask a question remains stupid forever, Chinese Priverb.
From: "JD" ds"at"comteck.com
To: "BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.ed" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Nest Problem...Help
Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2002 13:10:00 -0500
Reply-To: ds"at"comteck.com
Sender: owner-BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
...
From: "JD" ds"at"comteck.com
To: "BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.ed" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: Nest Problem...Help
Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2002 15:39:35 -0500
Joe,
Hello
Thank you for your reply to my email. Actually, in one of my
books it says that the female cowbird removes one of the eggs
from the nest then lays her own. There is no other eggs in the
box except the 2 BB eggs. Before your email I read things on
the cornell website in the archives & one email someone
said the BB's would remove any bad eggs so I just went back
& put the punctured egg back where I found it. I am gonna
go out there & just remove it. I first thought by putting
it back in the nest that what ever did it would just take the
damaged one, but then I worried that it would harm the good
egg. So then I thougt well if I put the damaged egg back where
I found it they would just take that one or the BB would take
it out. I will just go ahead n remove it then.
If it is House Wren which I don't think it is as I have never
seen one in my yard. I do have the Carolina Wrens. Last year
when my BB's were nesting in the other BB nestbox I had a pair
of Carolina Wrens nest in the BB nestbox that this years BB
are nesting in now. Should I put up another BB box or see what
happens w/ this one?
Joleen in Indiana
----- Original Message -----
From: "Joe Huber" hubertrap"at"webtv.net
To: ds"at"comteck.com; BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Sent: Saturday, April 27, 2002 2:19 PM
Subject: Re: Nest Problem...Help
Hi Joleen and all, holes poked in
eggs are generally caused by House Wrens, but it is possible
a HOSP
has done that. I really don't think the Cow bird Did it since
all she wants
to do is enter any lay eggs with the others. Since these bluebird
eggs are punctured you may as well remove them as they won't
hatch.
There is a chance the BLuebirds will start again and lay new
eggs as
long as no other problems develop. Let every one know what happens
next. Good Birding Joe Huber Venice Fl.
From: "JD" ds"at"comteck.com
To: "BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.ed" BLUEBIRD-L"at"cornell.edu
Subject: Re: Nest Problem...Help
Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2002 16:27:57 -0500
Karen,
Hello
Thank you for your reply. A part of me thinks maybe it is the
Cowbird (gut feeling) & she didn't get to finish the job
as maybe the BB's finally won the fight in the end even tho
they lost one egg. Just a thought. I wasn't up this morning
to know who did this. I am definately gonna be out there tomorrow
morning to check on things.
The thing I am worried about is if the BB's will continue to
nest in this box or give up?
Joleen in Indiana
----- Original Message -----
From: Karen Louise Lippy
To: ds"at"comteck.com
Sent: Saturday, April 27, 2002 4:10 PM
Subject: Re: Nest Problem...Help
Joleen,
It is possible that the cowbird punctured the eggs, but they
usually remove them before laying one of their own. It definitely
sounds as if you are having conflict at the box. It's good your
bluebird is so aggressive. I'd take the egg out. It will never
develop and can mess the nest attracting predators or parasites.
Karen from South Central PA
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