
Johnnie HydeEly MN
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Chip,
We’ve seen off and on for years - but more frequently this winter - the “frozen-bird syndrome” just as you describe. If the alarm goes out when a bird is on the feeder, it freezes in place; apparently that is a better strategy than flying for cover and risk getting picked off midair. Other birds stop coming to the feeder and also freeze in place, although ones in the canopy sometimes don’t and continue to sound the alarm. I assume those birds know they have an altitude advantage on the predator and figure they’re not likely to suffer a successful attack from below.
Through many iterations of this behavior this winter, I was never able to see the culprit until just recently when I went outside and saw a northern shrike in the canopy above the feeders. In previous incidents, I’d seen birds as large as hairy woodpeckers freeze at the feeder. I’m not sure if shrikes could take them; perhaps the woodpeckers are reacting to a generic predator warning that doesn’t specify size or abilities.
Interestingly, the other day our very numerous blue jays erupted into a frenzy of calling and kept it up for 20 or 30 minutes, moving slowly through the woods around our house. The smaller birds simply disappeared. Finally, the pine marten that was in a video I shared a few days ago showed up, which I’m guessing caused the alarm.
I understand birds can give different alarm calls for ground versus avian predators. Perhaps the small birds reacted the way they did to a marten alarm because martens do spend a lot of time hunting in the canopy, so sort of a hybrid ground/aerial predator, although they are far more effective at catching birds in the canopy at night or when they’re on nests.
Steve Wilson
Isabella
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On Mar 8, 2026, at 9:03 AM, chip hanson <maxfra...@gmail.com> wrote:
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I also found it fascinating, but not a slog. That may be because I listened to it and the author is an excellent narrator.
From: elyfieldn...@googlegroups.com <elyfieldn...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Don Brown
Sent: Monday, March 9, 2026 12:43 PM
To: Jane Johnston <jmj...@gmail.com>
Cc: Carl Karasti <gca...@gmail.com>; chip hanson <maxfra...@gmail.com>; Reid Carron <fishrei...@gmail.com>; Johnna Hyde <Joh...@ravenwords.com>; Ely Field Naturalists <elyfieldn...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: {Ely Field Naturalists} Woodpeckers
It is a little strange but highlights the differences in how species behave. Some of that has to do with the differences in their senses and perception. If you are interested in that kind of stuff, for example, how human sight differs from that of a bee or a mantis shrimp, here is a fascinating book that goes thru all the senses. It’s a bit of a slog to read but well worth the effort and the world will never seem the same again. It’s akin to Alexander Horowitz's “Inside of a Dog” but much broader. Inexpensive copies are available here: https://www.abebooks.com/
And, it answers the question: how do vultures locate carrion? The answer may surprise you.


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