Date: 4/5/26 11:55 am
From: 'Fran Rutkovsky' via NFLbirds <nflbirds...>
Subject: Re: [NFLbirds] Waxwings and Tuliptrees
Don , I always watch the tops of flowering Tuliptrees in spring for
Baltimore & Orchard Orioles. Fran

On 04/05/2026 1:38 PM EDT Don Morrow <donaldcmorrow...>
wrote:

I was birding at Klapp-Phipps Park, walking along a bottomland
forest trail and hoping for April migrants. Leafout is complete
and birds were calling from within the canopy; Red-eyed Vireos,
Northern Parulas and Tufted Titmice. The thick foliage is
delightful, but conceals and I was seeing little. Then, I noticed
lots of movement in the top of a tuliptree. It was a flock of
about forty Cedar Waxwings. Their flocks are always in motion,
moving within their feeding tree and often from there to a nearby
tree to rest for a few moments before heading back to feed again.
If they are around, they’re easy to spot.

Cedar Waxwings are irruptive, nomadic migrants and show a seasonal
change in feeding habits. They eat caterpillars and flying insects
when they are up North and slowly shift their diet in the summer
as fruits develop. When we see them, from late Fall through
Spring, their diet is almost exclusively fruit. In North Florida,
Laurel Cherry, Mistletoe, Black Gum, Sugarberry and Cabbage Palm
provide the bulk of their diet, but I have seen them feeding on
another half dozen species of trees, shrubs, and vines. Lately,
they’ve been feasting on the red berries of the decorative
hollies around town.

So, I was surprised to see them swarming the tuliptree. Waxwings
will eat seeds and I have seen both waxwings and cardinals feeding
on the cone-shaped seedheads of tuliptrees in mid-winter, but by
late winter, tuliptree seeds are usually gone, either eaten or
having fallen off. In early April these trees are in flower with
three-inch wide tulip-shaped blossoms that are pale creamy-yellow
with orange splotches. It is the ovaries at the base of the flower
that will develop into a seedhead by the end of summer.

Seeing the waxwings in the tuliptree, I assumed that they were
searching for leftover seeds. The woody bases of tuliptree
seedheads persist into Spring and this tree still had a number of
them on its branches. However, when I looked more closely, I saw
that they were ignoring the remaining seedheads and were going for
the tuliptree’s flowers. Doing some research, I have found that
for a short period in Spring when waxwings have depleted the
available wild fruit supply, half of the diet of waxwings may be
comprised of flowers, which “present unique and important
seasonal nutrients for waxwings.”

Most flowering trees, like haw, fringe tree, red buckeye and
dogwood, are small understory trees. However, some like tuliptree
are canopy trees, large trees with concomitantly large flowers,
which are apparently an important short-term food resource for
Cedar Waxwings in Spring.

So, a Cedar Waxwing activity that seemed fruitless was actually
aimed at flowers. I am a curious naturalist and have been
wandering around for many years, but I still find things new to me
almost every time I go outside.

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