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The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
Birds and wildlife

Features

  • Birds and berries
  • Changing colour for winter
  • Cute, fluffy - and hard as nails!
  • Dining out - in your garden
  • Fattening for flight
  • For birds, spring starts here
  • Gulls and man
  • Home, sweet home
  • Iconic birds soar higher
  • Jewels in the crown
  • New feathers, please
  • Notes on nature blog
  • Our spectacular seabirds
  • Sparrowhawks and songbirds
  • The voices of spring
  • Trails in Wales
  • Watching at the dragon's den
  • What do birds do in cold weather?
  • What will birds be eating for their Christmas dinner?
  • Winter flocks
  • Worms: a tasty, nutritious, healthy snack

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Home > Birds and wildlife > Features > Birds and berries

Birds and berries

Redwing eating red berries
Thrushes, like redwings, prefer rowan and other berries with small seeds

By September, the hedgerows are laden with berries, providing delicious pickings for people and birds alike. The intricate relationship between birds and berries has developed into a mutual dependence for survival.

Berries are an important food source for many birds during the winter, especially when the ground is too frozen to hunt worms or snails, and there are few insects about. 

Some birds, like song and mistle thrushes, blackbirds, redwings and fieldfares, find most of their winter food from berries. Take care, though: some berries that are tasty treats for birds are poisonous to humans!

Berry cunning

Some plants use berries as a clever way to entice birds and other animals to distribute their seeds. A plant that produces berries surrounds its seed in juicy, fleshy pith, rewarding the birds that eat them with vitamins and energy. 

The dry pith of ivy berries contains nearly as many calories as Mars bars! In most cases, while the bird digests the pith and juice, the seeds travel undamaged through the bird's gut, and may be dropped many miles from the parent plant. It's no coincidence that lots of young trees grow near a fence or post that a bird might perch on! 

'It's no coincidence that lots of young trees grow near a fence or post that a bird might perch on!'

Some berry seeds, like those of juniper, will actually grow better after passing through a bird's gut, which removes natural chemicals that would otherwise prevent the seed from growing. Other berry seeds, like mistletoe, are sticky, and must cause birds some frustration when they stick to their bills! The birds wipe their bills on other trees, unwittingly sowing more mistletoe plants. 

Most berries are either red or black. This makes the berries easier for birds to find them. 

Evergreens, and plants that produce berries when their leaves are still green, generally produce red berries, which show up well against a green background. Black berries are thought to show up better against leaves that have turned yellow or brown.

Bird in a bush

Birds feed in different ways. Redwings and starlings happily feed in flocks. Others, like the mistle thrush, may try to keep a valuable, berry-laden bush just for itself. 

Thrushes and waxwings prefer berries with smaller seeds, like rowan, as they are really only interested in the flesh, whereas other birds, like hawfinches, can make use of the seed itself, and so are attracted to berries with large seeds, such as hawthorn, blackthorn (which grows the sloes that go to make 'sloe gin'), cherries, and bullace (wild plum). The overall size of the berry is important, too, with larger berries like dog-rose hips generally proving too large for birds smaller than blackbirds or fieldfares.

In the garden

The winter is a good time to consider planting fruit and berry bearing trees or bushes in the garden. As well as the many native berry-bearing species (including rowan, holly, whitebeam, spindle, dog rose, guelder rose, elder, hawthorn, honeysuckle and ivy), attractive shrubs like cotoneaster, pyracantha and berberis are especially good for a wide range of birds. 

Berry and fruit bearing trees provide food for a range of insects and animals, too: hedgehogs, badgers, mice, squirrels and even foxes will all happily feed on them. All sorts of fruit are attractive to insects, and if you leave them where they fall in the late summer and autumn they will attract numerous butterflies to their syrupy goodness. 

Fallen fruit can also provide birds with a cold-weather treat: pop some in the freezer, and save it for the winter bird table.

Instant berries

To get berries in your garden straight away, you can buy special mini bird cakes with berries from our online shop. Find out more on our mini bird cake feeder page.

What can I do?

Want berries in your garden? We have advice on which shrubs to plant

Planting for wildlife

Last modified: 22 September 2006

Bird guide

  • Blackbird
  • Hawfinch
  • Mistle thrush
  • Redwing
  • Song thrush
  • Waxwing

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Last published: 07/06/2007 20:24:38
Show/hide picture credits
Redwing eating red berries - Steve Round
Bluebells in woodland at RSPB Minsmere - David Tipling (rspb-images.com, Ref: D_2005_8508_000)
Blackbird standing in short grass - Sue Tranter (rspb-images.com, Ref: D_2006_20446_0026 )
Bank Vole - Andy Holt