- How to Stop Birds From Flying Into Windows
- Why Do Birds Collide with Windows
- Reflections of Vegetation can cause Bird Strikes
- How to Prevent Birds from Flying into Windows
- 1. Relocate Bird Feeders.
- 2. Hang wind chimes, wind spinners, pinwheels.
- 3. Cover External Reflections.
- 4. Attach Branches on Your Windows.
- 5. Cover Windows with Nettings.
- 6. Use Lights When Required.
- What to do When a Bird Hits a Window.
- Related Articles on Bird Houses, Bird Feeders & More
- How can we REALLY prevent birds from flying into our windows?
- Why do birds collide with windows, and how can we help? We explore the science behind bird collisions and dispel some common myths about how to prevent them, shining a spotlight on exciting projects across the world that are making a real difference. And you can join in!
- Why do birds fly into windows?
- What are the most dangerous structures?
- What can I do to prevent bird collisions?
- Common myths to avoid
- Other things you can do
- How to Stop Birds from Flying into Your Windows
- Question:
- The NYC Audubon Chimes In
How to Stop Birds From Flying Into Windows
Learn how to stop birds from flying into your glass windows. Have you ever heard the sickening “thud” of a bird hitting your window glass? Do you hate seeing a gorgeous winged creature lying on the floor, lifeless beneath your window? Unfortunately, every year almost a billion birds suffer terrible deaths due to window collisions in the U.S. only. If you want to prevent birds from flying into your windows, the first step is to understand why birds collide with windows.
Why Do Birds Collide with Windows
Bird strikes occur due to many reasons. Birds are different from people. They do not see the world like we do. They fail to recognize windows as barriers. The reflections they see in a window’s glass often look like open spaces to them. This makes them fly full-speed into a window.
Because bird strikes are extremely common, you might think that birds have poor eyesight, but that is not true. In reality, birds’ eyes are on the sides of their heads, which gives them a wide-angled vision. This 360-degree view gives them the opportunity to spot any predators or rivals that may be approaching. However, this also means that it is difficult for them to focus directly in front of them.
Reflections of Vegetation can cause Bird Strikes
During day time, birds spot reflections of vegetation or see plants through the glass windows. Their attempt to reach those plants results in them colliding with windows. However, nighttime collisions are also common. Nocturnal migrants such as songbirds tend to crash into windows because they’re attracted to the lights they can see through them. They follow the unnatural light because they misinterpret it as the light from the moon or stars that they rely on for navigation.
If you have noticed, bird collisions tend to increase in the spring season. This is because spring is considered the breeding season in which male birds define and defend their territories. This enhanced bird movement leads to an increase in the probability of birds colliding into windows. Furthermore, your window may be the male bird’s defined territory. While you may find it annoying, the bird pecking on your window is actually trying to defend itself. The bird may identify its own reflection as an intruder or danger and may end up attacking the window.
Lastly, birds may also collide with windows when they’re fleeing to seek cover from predators. In an attempt to escape dangerous situations or predators, birds panic and get flustered and end up flying into windows.
How to Prevent Birds from Flying into Windows
Now that you know why birds hit your windows, it’s time to prevent it. Thankfully, doing so is easy. Here are a ways to help ensure bird safety.
1. Relocate Bird Feeders.
Move bird feeders and birdbaths to a different location. Bird houses should be placed either within 3 feet of a window or more than 30 feet away from a window. If placed close to a window, they won’t fly away from the bird feeder with enough force to get themselves injured.
2. Hang wind chimes, wind spinners, pinwheels.
These decorative items placed near or in front of windows can drastically help reduce birds flying into windows. The strange motion of these items cause birds to avoid flying near these windows. This one tip alone, has prevented bird strikes at our house for over two years. At the same time, we have not noticed a decline in bird activity.
3. Cover External Reflections.
Many birds crash into windows because of reflections. Blocking the reflections may help prevent birds from crashing into windows. Stickers of other predator birds such as falcons and hawks may also help keep birds away from the windows.
4. Attach Branches on Your Windows.
You can also attach branches in front of your windows. Arrange the branches in such a way that they don’t affect your view but are effective enough to keep the birds at bay. The branches will cause the birds to slow down while flying, thus preventing collision.
5. Cover Windows with Nettings.
You can opt for covering your windows with nettings. Installing netting will not obstruct your view, but will act as a physical barrier between a bird and window. Small-mesh netting is the best option as it enables the birds to jump off unharmed without getting themselves tangled in the nest.
6. Use Lights When Required.
This step should be followed not only to ensure bird safety but also to help save the environment. Switch your lights off when they’re not in use—especially during nighttime, as it will prevent the nocturnal birds from crashing into windows. Make sure you practice this during migration periods as well.
What to do When a Bird Hits a Window.
Despite these measures, if a bird ends up hitting your window, we suggest you go help the bird. If a bird hits your window and falls down, it’s not necessarily dead. When birds crash into windows they get stunned and let their guard down, which allows predators to attack them. However, checking up on the bird and putting it in a dark box in case it is stunned, will help it recover.
Bird flying into window has become a significant issue in the past few centuries due to the expansion of cities and towns with tall buildings and skyscrapers. Adopt the above measures, especially if you’re residing in a tall building, to prevent birds from flying into your windows. See the American Bird Conservancy – for estimates on bird glass collisions.
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Related Articles on Bird Houses, Bird Feeders & More
Use these free DIY bird house plans and bird feeder plans to attract bluebirds, chickadees, flickers, finches, house sparrows, kestrel, nuthatches, owls, purple martins, swallows, thrushes, warblers, woodpeckers, wrens, and other birds to your garden.
How can we REALLY prevent birds from flying into our windows?
Why do birds collide with windows, and how can we help? We explore the science behind bird collisions and dispel some common myths about how to prevent them, shining a spotlight on exciting projects across the world that are making a real difference. And you can join in!
This article is part of our Spring Alive programme to inspire and educate children across Africa and Eurasia about the wonders of nature and bird migration. The 2019 Spring Alive season was made possible with the support of Heidelberg Cement.
Nothing is more heart-breaking than hearing that familiar dull thud, and running to find a dusty, bird-shaped imprint on your window. Sometimes, the bird is only stunned, and will live to fly another day. But sometimes, it will not. You may only have encountered this once or twice in your life, but with billions of windows across the world, it all adds up. If you’ve ever seen a dead bird lying on the ground near a bus shelter, tall skyscraper or just a house with windows, this may well have been the reason.
Why do birds fly into windows?
You may wonder how it’s possible that birds cannot see windows, when to us it is obvious there is something in the way. It’s not because they have bad eyesight – quite the opposite. Birds’ eyes are on the sides of their heads, giving them extremely wide-angle vision – sometimes a completely 360 ° view, which is extremely useful in spotting approaching predators, rivals or potential mates. However, this means that a comparatively small area of their vision is covered by both eyes, making it hard to focus on the scene directly in front of them.
Because of this, they may see the view on the opposite side of the window and think they can fly right through. Or, they may see nearby trees reflected in the glass, and mistake it for a completely new area to explore. Another issue is that until relatively recently, birds never needed to be able to see glass. They evolved for millennia in a world without glass, and it’s only in the past few centuries, with the growth of human technology and the expansion of towns and cities, that it has become a problem.
Another, less well-known issue, is unnatural light. This is especially hazardous for birds that migrate at night, and use the light from the moon and stars to help them navigate. These birds may become disorientated by artificial light and lose their way, or fly towards it and collide with the glass. This effect is even worse in poor weather such as fog, when visibility is low.
Studies have shown that migratory bird species are more likely to strike glass than resident ones, even when they are not migrating. This may be because resident birds can learn the location of glass structures and avoid them, whereas to migratory birds, the landscape is less familiar.
What are the most dangerous structures?
The first one is pretty obvious – any buildings with large panes of flat, uninterrupted glass. These act just like a mirror. But another hazard consists of corners where both sides are made of glass, such as balconies or the edges of buildings. To a bird, it looks like they can fly straight through. Bus shelters present a similar problem, and skyscrapers are a particular hazard because their height obstructs the flight paths of many birds. But in general, anything with transparent glass could pose a hazard to birds — including windows on your house.
What can I do to prevent bird collisions?
Fortunately, preventing bird collisions is very simple. All you need to do is put stickers or transfers (“decals”) on the glass to show birds that there is something in the way. These stickers can come in many shapes, styles, colours or sizes, and you can even make your own – just get creative! But as you do, here are some common myths that you should avoid…
Common myths to avoid
Black stickers are the most visible: This is incorrect. Windows often look dark from the outside, so black silhouettes do not create enough contrast. In fact, imprints of bird collisions have often been found right beside black stickers. Instead, go wild with colour – especially red and orange shades, which have been proven to be more effective than blue and green.
The outline of a bird of prey will scare off smaller birds: It sounds like a good idea, but sadly, this is a myth. There has been no evidence that birds are scared away by stickers shaped like birds of prey.
One sticker per window is enough: Not true. Birds are accustomed to flying through very small spaces, such as gaps between branches, so they may still attempt to fly into a window with one sticker. Instead, we recommend that stickers are placed 10 – 15 centimetres apart. Use the “palm area rule”: if the gap is bigger than the palm of an adult’s hand, a bird may still attempt to fly through. That said, any stickers at all are better than none.
Stickers go on the inside of the window: False. If you are able to, stick them on the outside of the glass, where they are far better at breaking up reflections.
Window stickers are ugly: Not at all! There are countless different designs that you can try: schools have even held competitions to create the most beautifully-decorated local bus stop.
Other things you can do
Put in net curtains or venetian blinds – these let light in, but also make your windows visible to birds. Similarly, make sure you close your curtains, blinds or shutters when you go out.
Switch your lights off when you don’t need them – not only is this good for the environment (and your purse), it also prevents nocturnal birds from getting confused and striking the glass. Even skyscrapers have started doing it: the Post Tower in Bonn, Germany switches its lights off every night during migration periods.
If a bird still hits your window and is lying motionless, it may not be dead, but merely stunned. Put it in a darkened box for an hour, and it may calm down and recover enough to fly back out into the world.
As towns and cities expand, glass collisions may seem like a growing problem, but more and more buildings are being designed with bird safety in mind. There are now many offices, galleries, schools and even zoos with coloured, frosted or striped glass, using creativity to make bird safety beautiful. And you can be part of it.
How to Stop Birds from Flying into Your Windows
Ever found a beautiful bird dead outside your home? Chances are it smashed into your window and never recovered. For every dead bird you find, just imagine how many were snatched up by a cat or pulled into the brush by some other critter. Worldwide, window collisions kill close to a billion(!) birds every year. With spring migration currently underway in the northern hemisphere, now is as good as ever to make your home bird safe. The DIY experts at Stack Exchange tell you how.
Question:
Over the last three days, I have probably had over a dozen birds try to fly through my sunroom, only to be stopped by the 72″ x 52″ sliding windows. Three of the birds have died.
What can I do so that the birds realize there is something there, thereby preventing them from flying into the window?
The NYC Audubon Chimes In
After habitat loss, the greatest threat to wild birds may be glass windows.
NYC Audubon started Project Safe Flight in 1997 to address the issue in New York City. Daniel Klem, an ornithologist at Muhlenberg College, estimates that close to a billion birds are killed every year by flying into glass. A study he conducted, with NYC Audubon, found 1.3 birds killed per hectare per year in an urban setting, which works out to over 90,000 birds per year in New York alone.
All bird species are vulnerable, although migratory songbirds are the main victims. Most are killed instantly, but others succumb when they are stunned and fall prey to gulls, rats, or other predators.
We have rescued over 1,200 birds, persuaded buildings to retrofit their more dangerous windows, and published Bird-Safe Building Guidelines to help architects and designers develop solutions in new buildings.
Private homes as well as skyscrapers endanger birds. Most home owners have heard the unpleasant thump that means a bird has hit a window; many have also found bird carcasses near their windows. Birds do not see the glass as a solid barrier; they see reflections of trees or sky or a fly-through to open space beyond. This should come as no surprise, since even people occasionally walk into glass doors. For a person it is merely embarrassing, for a bird it is often fatal.
Homeowners can reduce the collisions and save bird lives in a number of ways:
— Bird feeders should be placed within three feet of a window, so that birds visiting the feeder cannot get up enough flight speed to hurt themselves.
— Installing a pattern on a window where birds are known to hit can be uncomplicated and inexpensive. Patterns with negative space no greater than 4 by 2 inches, the size of a hand, are most effective.
— Decals of hawks or other raptors are not particularly successful, unless the decals are spaced very closely— and then it doesn’t really matter if they are of birds of prey or an abstract design.