PLANTS THAT ATTRACT SEED-EATING BIRDS
StandardYou'll see lots of advice on the Internet about shrubs and trees with colorful berries that attract birds: serviceberries, hollies, crabapples, etc. After all, birds like them and we find them attractive too. But not all bird species are fruit-eaters. In fact, the greatest number are seed-eaters, birds like goldfinches, chickadees, grosbeaks, and nuthatches. Few sites seem to mention the many plants you can grow to attract this group. It's as if you're expected to put up bird feeders for seed-eating birds and be content with that.
I don't use bird feeders, yet I see all sorts of birds (and animals too!) visiting my garden in the winter, most of them seed-eaters, birds that flock to the varied vegetation I provide. You see, I do no fall cleanup and all my perennials, annuals and grasses are left to stand all winter, to the great delight of the seed-eating crowd.
The secret to attracting birds with seed-bearing plants is to provide a lot of variety. Make sure you have a wide range of plants, some maturing in summer or fall, others holding on to their seeds through the winter. This will attract the greatest number of bird species. You'll need herbaceous plants (perennials, annuals, etc.), but also shrubs and trees. About the only kind of backyard environment that seed-eating birds will have nothing to do with is a neatly-kept lawn, so up the flowers and shrubs, and cut back on lawn for the best range of bird visitors.
And don't scorn weeds, either! Many plants considered weeds (thistle, goldenrod, fireweed, etc.) or weed trees, like box elder (Acer negundo), are actually great plants for attracting birds. If you have the space, why not turn a corner of your yard into a wildlife habitat by letting otherwise undesirable plants grow freely? The birds will thank you for it! (As will the butterflies, but that's a different story!)
Some Plants to Try
Here are some plants that seed-eating birds particularly like. They are found in all categories, from annuals to perennials, biennials, vines, shrubs, trees and even conifers. You'll notice that most of these plants are fairly common garden plants: it's just that we rarely think of them as bird fodder. Just leave them along during the winter and watch the birds come in great numbers!
- Abies spp. (fir) zones 1 to 7, depending on the species
- Acer spp. (maple) zones 3 to 8, depending on the species
- Achillea spp. (yarrow) zones 2 to 4, depending on the species
- Alnus spp. (alder) zones 1 to 8, depending on the species
Amaranthus spp. (amaranth, love-lies-bleeding) annual
- Andropogon spp. (bluestem) zone 3
- Aquilegia spp. (columbine) zone 3
- Asclepias spp. (milkweed) zones 3 to 10, depending on the species
- Aster spp. (aster) zones 2 to 6, depending on the species
- Betulus spp. (birch) zones 1 to 5, depending on the species
- Calendula spp. (pot marigold) annual
- Campanula spp. (bellflower) zones 1 to 6, depending on the species
- Carpinus spp. (hackberry) zones 4 to 7, depending on the species
- Centaurea spp. (cornflower) annual or zone 3, depending on the species
- Cerastium spp. (snow-in-summer) zones 2 to 4, depending on the species
- Cirsium spp. (thistle) zones 2-6, depending on the species
Clematis spp. (clematis) zones 2-8, depending on the species
- Coreopsis spp. (coreopsis) annual or zones 3-7, depending on the species
- Cosmos spp. (cosmos) annual
- Delphinium spp. (delphinium, larkspur) zone 3
- Deschampsia caespitosa (tufted hair grass) zone 3
- Echinacea spp. (echinacea, purple coneflower) zone 3
- Echinops spp. (globe thistle) zone 3
- Epilobium angustifolium (fireweed) zone 2
- Erysiumum spp. (wallflower) zone 6
- Eschscholzia spp. (California poppy) annual
- Eupatorium spp. (Joe Pye weed) zone 3
Fraxinus spp. (ash) zones 3 to 7, depending on the species
- Gaillardia spp. (gaillardia, blanket flower) annual or zone 3
- Hamamelis spp. (witchhazel) zones 4 to 8, depending on the species
- Helianthus annuus (sunflower) annual
- Helianthus spp. (perennial sunflower) zones 3-6, depending on the species
- Hesperis matronalis (dame's rocket) Zone 3
- Limonium sinuatum (statice) annual
- Linum spp. (flax) annual or zone 3
Miscanthus spp. (maiden grass) zones 4 to 6, depending on the species
- Nigella damascena (love-in-a-mist) annual
- Oeonothera spp. (evening primrose) zones 3-6, depending on the species
- Onopordum spp. (Scotch thistle) zone 4
- Panicum virgatum (switch grass) zone 3
- Papaver spp. (poppy) annual or zone 3
- Pennisetum spp. (fountain grass, millet) annual or zone 5
- Phlox spp. (phlox) annual or zone 3, depending on the species
Picea spp. (spruce) zones 1 to 7, depending on the species
- Pinus spp. (pine) zones 3 to 9, depending on species
- Portulaca grandiflora (portulaca) annual
- Rudbeckia spp. (coneflower) zone 3
- Rumex spp. (sorrel) zones 3 to 5, depending on the species
- Salvia spp. (sage) annual or zones 3 to 10, depending on the species
- Scabiosa spp. (scabiosa, pincushion flower) annual or zone 3, depending on the species
Sedum spp. (sedum) zones 3 to 10, depending on the species
- Solidago spp. (goldenrod) zone 2
- Sorghastrum nutans (false sorghum) zone 3
- Tagetes spp. (marigold) annual
- Thuja spp. (arborvitae) zones 3 to 6, depending on the species
- Tsuga spp. (hemlock) zones 4 to 6, depending on the species
- Verbascum (mullein) zones 3 to 7, depending on the species
- Vernonia spp. (ironweed) zone 4
- Zinnia spp. (zinnia) annual
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