These Fantastic Photos Show Birds Thriving With Native Plants

Enjoy some of our favorite submissions to the Plants for Birds category of the 2020 探花精选 Photography Awards.

Capturing a crisp, clear image听of a bird is always a听challenge. But capturing a crisp, clear image听of听a bird with a plant native to the area? Even more so.听 听

Of course, you wouldn't know听it looking at the below听submissions to the Plants for Birds category of the 2020 探花精选 Photography Awards. As with last year's awards, when the new category debuted, we听once again received so many stellar shots听that, in addition to听the 辞蹿蹿颈肠颈补濒听飞颈苍苍别谤蝉 and those selected for the听the听Top 100,听we've decided to share more of our favorites in a bonus听gallery.听听

Whether they capture birds gorging听on berries or belting their songs from a budding branch, each of the images听below showcases听the 听native plants play in the everyday lives of birds. Not only does local flora provide 尘辞谤别听蹿辞辞诲 and better shelter听than non-native plants, but as threats like听climate change and habitat loss continue to put pressure on birds, the availability of听native trees, shrubs, and flowers grows even听more imporant.听听

Check out the incredible gallery below to learn more about each bird species and the native plant听featured. And if听you鈥檙e feeling inspired afterward,听you can help birds and the environment by growing native plants around your own home or community. 探花精选鈥檚 program has the resources to help you get started. Use our tool to identify plants native to your region, and then learn how you can make your backyard or balcony听more bird-friendly.听

Rose-breasted Grosbeak on Red Elderberry (above)

To capture听this Rose-breasted Grosbeak听mid-fruit snack, the photographer allowed a native bush of red elderberry to flourish in the summer near their home in Quebec, and waited patiently until this female came along to feed her nearby young ones. While they鈥檙e currently found in stable numbers,听research from avian ecologists听suggests that grosbeaks are unable to keep up with seasonal temperature increases and early blooms as a result of climate change.

Pyrrhuloxia on Ocotillo

Among the saguaro cactus blooms and wildflowers, desert environments in Arizona鈥檚 spring months host a dramatic color pairing worth looking for: The burnt red and gray feathering on the Pyrrhuloxia, known as the 鈥渄esert cardinal,鈥 against the red-orange blooms on an ocotillo. Pyrrhuloxias are primarily ground foragers, usually hopping among shrubs on the desert floor, but as this cactus-like plant blossoms, these birds are found feasting from the top sometimes as high as 15 feet.

Song Sparrow on Common Cattail

This Song Sparrow perches on a cattail in Washington state while it gathers nesting materials on a sunny morning. Cattails and their cottony fluff make for ideal nest lining听for native birds that build nests in the springtime. When her mouth wasn鈥檛 full of cattail fluff, this female sparrow sang while working鈥攁 rare treat, considering it鈥檚 the male Song Sparrows that more typically live up to the species鈥 name.听

Bushtit on Red Alder

Don鈥檛 let this slick Bushtit deceive you. Though the red alder鈥檚 catkins鈥攖he long, cylindrical flowers that mark the first blooms of spring for this tree鈥攎ay seem like the main course, the bird is actually feasting on larvae buried in the flower. This photo displays the advantage of the Bushtit鈥檚 diminutive size: Larger birds tend to forage from the top of plants, but Bushtits can bank on their light weight (less than one-fifth of an ounce) to hang upside down.

Mourning Warbler on Black Cherry

A typically elusive Mourning Warbler sings in plain听view atop a听black cherry branch. The black cherry shrub crawls with a variety of insects during the warbler鈥檚 breeding season in the northern U.S. and Canada. Mourning Warblers share these shrubs with other small birds who find the plant's听low perches ideal for foraging and, in this image, singing.

Eastern Bluebird on Winterberry Holly

On a cold January morning, an Eastern Bluebird feasts on a bounty of听winterberries. While the lean winter months can pose a risk for the species, native plants like the winterberry holly are major food providers. This shot, taken at a suburban park in Virginia, demonstrates the benefits of replanting native plant species in semi-urban areas to attract and aid birds in the region.

Canada Jay on Ponderosa Pine

Striking a postcard-quality pose, this Canada Jay perches from the peak of a ponderosa pine near Aspen, Colorado. These birds know how to make their cold northern habitat work for them: The native ponderosa pines and boreal trees basically act as听their refrigerators, where Canada Jays store food from the fall in the tree鈥檚 bark flakes and branches, to be eaten throughout the winter months.

Blackpoll Warbler on Willow

A tiny听Blackpoll Warbler strikes a fierce stance while singing from a thicket of willow shrubs in Nome, Alaska. These birds have many reasons to be drawn to willow shrubs, which provide perches, protection, nesting sites,听and a buffet of insects. The Blackpoll Warbler doesn鈥檛 just look tough鈥攈e听made an immensely long journey during migration to reach Alaska from his wintering habitat in northern South America.听

Calliope Hummingbird on California Redbud

It鈥檚 impressive enough that a Bay Area photographer managed to听snap such a clear shot of a Calliope Hummingbird, but to capture it with the first blooms of a native California redbud is a feat worth celebrating. Calliope Hummingbirds share these vibrant, sweet flowers with local听Anna鈥檚 Hummingbirds while migrating north to their summer breeding range.听

Cedar Waxwing on Chokecherry

This young Cedar Waxwing relies on its acrobatic reach to feed from a chokecherry shrub in autumn. As the chokecherries ripen in the summer and fall months, Cedar Waxwings incorporate them into their already fruit-heavy diets. Such a diet has led to a phenomenon where, after gorging on berries in the winter and spring that have been over-ripened, thawed and fermented, waxwings have been known to get tipsy.

California Scrub Jay on Toyon

The Toyon Shrub, known as the California holly,听fruits in full in the winter, providing a plentiful food source to a number of the region鈥檚 bird species, including the California Scrub-Jay. This photo, taken in the urban oasis of Los Angeles鈥 Kenneth Hahn State Recreation Area, shows California Scrub-Jays in their most accessible habitat: well-wooded suburbs and city parks.

Carolina Chickadee on American Sweetgum

This inverted Carolina Chickadee is听picking seeds out of a sweetgum tree's seed balls.听Foraging insects and seeds from plants is crucial for chickadees, because they don鈥檛 typically use bird feeders during nesting season. This also makes them vulnerable as landscapers replace听native plants.听Researchers found, for example, that the birds听are being driven out of the suburbs of Washington, D.C., where native trees are being replaced by non-native ones that supply fewer听food sources.

Bobolink on Hawthorn

The molting stage for this male Bobolink has left听him without his typical听jet-black chest just before the fall migration, as he sings from a native hawthorn adorned with red-and-gold听leaves. Bobolinks are well-known for their distinctive, twinkling song that gives them their name. They are in fast decline in the eastern U.S. as they lose grassland habitat and听invasive plants replace beneficial ones, like hawthorn.

'I'iwi on M膩mane听

The crimson feathers of Hawaii鈥檚 鈥業鈥檌wi make听it an听eye-catching favorite of birders hiking in the higher elevations of Hawaii鈥檚 forests. This threatened听honeycreeper鈥檚 distinct curved beak is buried in a native m膩mane flower as the bird laps up nectar between rainstorms. Despite its popularity, the 鈥業鈥檌wi is a threatened species due to the spread of malaria from lowland mosquitos, which听are now moving to higher elevations thanks to climate change.听

Mountain Bluebird on Big Sagebrush

Big Sagebrush is a populous native plant that grows across the dry Western plains in 11 states. It plays a critical role in the ecosystem of arid high deserts, where Mountain Bluebirds primarily migrate to breed. Although its range is shrinking rapidly, the grassland plains where the sagebrush flourishes helps to sustain more than 350 species of animal life鈥攊ncluding at-risk birds like the Greater Sage-Grouse鈥攂y offering nesting materials and food for insectivores.