Bluebirds are found throughout North America including the eastern, western and mountain bluebirds. All bluebirds are cavity nesters and
will use an artificial nest box. Habitat and nest cavities had been disappearing for many years, but bluebirds have made an incredible
comeback due to thousands of bluebird nest boxes being installed across the country.
Nesting occurs from March through August. Only the female incubates the four to six eggs, which she maintains at a temperature of 98 - 100ºF.
Bluebirds are generally monogamous, staying together throughout the breeding season, and may breed together for more than one season.
However, some birds may switch mates during a breeding season to raise a second brood.
Bluebirds may raise two and sometimes three broods per season. Pairs may build their second nests on top of the first nest or they may
nest in an entirely new site. The male continues to take care of the recently fledged young while the female begins to re-nest. Young of
the first brood will occasionally help raise their siblings in the second brood.
Both sexes defend territories; however, the males tend to defend territory edges while the females primarily defend the nest site.
Males may carry nest material to the nest, but they do not participate in the actual building. They spend much time guarding their mates
during this time to prevent them from mating with other males.
Families flock together until fall, when they merge with other family flocks. Some, but not all, bluebirds residing in the northern portions
of the range migrate to southern latitudes, but those residing in southern latitudes tend to be residential.
Adult bluebirds tend to return to the same breeding territory year after year, but only a small percentage (3-5%) of young birds return
to where they hatched.
It is likely that up to 70% of all bluebirds die before reaching their first birthday. Most adult bluebirds live for only a few years,
while a small number live up to four or five years. The oldest recorded eastern bluebird was ten years old, with the oldest western and mountain
bluebirds being recorded at approximately six years old.
A bluebird can spot caterpillars and insects in tall grass at the remarkable distance of over 50 yards.
Bluebird females of all species have duller plumage than males; this may reduce their visibility to predators.
Bluebirds have no blue pigments in their feathers. Instead, each
feather barb has a thin layer of cells that absorb all wavelengths
of color except blue. Only the blue wavelength is reflected and scattered,
resulting in their blue appearance to our eyes.
Eastern bluebird numbers declined throughout the late 1800s and
much of the twentieth century, suffering an almost 90% decline in
population. Their numbers began to stabilize during the 1960s and
have slowly increased ever since. Among other reasons, competition
for nesting space from the introduced house sparrow and European starling
contributed to this century-long decline.
Unlike other bluebirds, mountain bluebirds are able to hover above
the ground while searching for insects. This enables them to live
in areas with few trees or shrubs, while eastern and western bluebirds
need trees to provide the elevated perches from which they hunt.
Late winter and early spring cold fronts can be very dangerous for
bluebirds due to the depletion of natural fruit supplies and the lack
of insects.
Eastern bluebirds will occasionally breed with mountain bluebirds
and successfully raise young.
Bluebirds consume about four grams of food per day, or about 12%
of their body weight. This is equivalent to a 200 pound human eating
24 pounds of food each day.
Eastern and western bluebirds sit on an elevated perch while searching
for insects; when one is spotted, they drop to the ground to capture
it with their bill. This sit-and-wait technique is called drop-hunting.
Like many other birds, bluebirds make a high volume shriek when
captured by predators. It is thought that these screams are used to
attract other predators, which in turn will then distract the original
predator long enough for the bluebird to escape.
As the days grow longer in the spring, a male bluebird’s brain
releases hormones that stimulate the production of testosterone, which
in turn stimulates the area of the brain responsible for singing behavior,
thus triggering the male to begin its mating song.
Unpaired male bluebirds may sing up to 1,000 songs per hour but
average a more reasonable rate of four to five hundred songs per hour.
Bluebirds can fly at speeds up to 45 miles per hour if necessary.
Bluebirds raise their young in old or pre-existing nesting cavities
and have a nesting success rate of about 60%. In contrast, birds that
construct a new nesting cavity each year (such as woodpeckers) have
a success rate of up to 85%. Predators are less likely to find a new
nesting cavity than one that has been in existence for a few years.
Northern flickers and hairy, downy and red-bellied woodpeckers all
produce nesting cavities suitable for later use by bluebirds.
Eastern bluebirds actually appear duller after molting in the late
summer than at any other time of the year. Their new body feathers
have dull brownish tips that wear off during the winter, leaving them
bright and colorful for the next breeding season.
The first Bluebird Nesting Box Trail was established in Adams County,
Illinois in 1934, by T.E. Musselman.