Take Down Your Feeders: Salmonella is Killing Songbirds

Please Note: This post is about a salmonella outbreak that occurred in several parts of the United States in winter and spring 2021. While that outbreak has passed, cleaning and disinfecting your feeders is always a good practice.

I’ve lived next to the same retired couple for 20 years. They’re kind with words and consistent with seed. Their place is breakfast for the birds. My place is the bathroom. I saw my first Steller’s jay on our shared wood-slat fence last spring. Exciting. But I’ve cleaned up bird poop for 20 years. Not exciting. I’m regularly hosing down my backyard because my neighbors keep a full bird feeder in their front yard.

Well, they did until this year. I walked the block last night. Their bird feeder is empty and cleaner than I’ve ever seen it. As it should be.

Eastern Idaho, where I live, is in the middle of a salmonella outbreak. It’s not a localized occurrence. Birds across the West are sick and spreading the illness as they congregate then migrate. Cases are coming in from Washington to Utah and to the east, North Carolina is having trouble too.

While bird feeding is experiencing a pandemic boom in popularity, feeding birds at this moment is having dire consequences. Birds are dying in no small part due to bird feeding.

You can still enjoy birds. But it’s time to remove seed and take down the feeders.

bird on a dead flower stalk
A pine siskin. © _Veit_ / Flickr

Outbreak

Songbirds are prone to salmonellosis, commonly called salmonella. Pine siskins are songbirds and they experienced an irruption over the winter. That’s a population explosion so there’s a lot of them flitting about this winter. Many of them are sick.

“This is the biggest outbreak I’ve heard of and I’ve been following birds for 25 years,” says Nicole Michel, National Audubon Society director of quantitative science. “It all ties into pine seed crops in the boreal regions where they usually are. There weren’t enough seeds so they came south. They’re weak because they’ve traveled farther than they’re used to and they’re congregating wherever they can eat.”

Salmonella starts when bird food gets wet. That’s how the bacteria grows on seed then it spreads through feces dropped in the same place. Salmonella is a fatal bacterial infection for birds and it’s hitting siskins hard because they congregate around feeders, but the outbreak isn’t species-specific. Anything eating seed in your yard, resident or migrator, can spread or contract salmonella. The three Ds of symptoms include ‘depressed, drowsy and diarrhea.’ Depression won’t be obvious in wildlife, but drowsy will. Infected birds close their eyes often and they puff up, like they do in cold weather, but they’re not cold. They’re sick.

California started seeing more cases in December. Other states are seeing an uptick this spring as the bacteria continues to spread, which is why more state agencies are asking people to remove their bird feeders.

“When large numbers of pine siskins congregate, the disease can spread rapidly causing high mortality,” says Krysta Rogers, California Department of Fish and Wildlife senior environment scientist and avian disease specialist. “Most birds die within 24 hours of infection.”

© Kurt Bauschardt / Flickr

Clean Your Feeders

What those birds leave behind, feces and germs, lingers and it comes in contact with anything else enticed to perch nearby. That’s why you have to clean.

Clean feeders once a week with warm soapy water in normal years. Clean them several times a week during salmonella years like the one we’re in now. Better yet, clean it with one part bleach to 10 parts water.

Soak the whole thing in that solution for about 10 minutes then air dry the container while you remove spent grain and other waste from the area around and under the feeder hanger. Put on gloves before you clean and wash your hands after handling equipment or collecting dead birds.

© Jason Bowler / Flickr

Encourage Avian Social Distancing

Especially this year, don’t stop at cleaning. Put your feeder away for a month. Michel, based in Portland, Oregon pulled her feeder for two months. If you must rehang your cleaned feeder, hang it empty.

“There’s a lot of other food sources they can still find,” Michel says. “The risk of death by starvation is lower than the risk of death by salmonella if you keep a contaminated feeder up.”

It’s the concentration of birds in one place that spreads the problem, but they won’t hang around if there are no hand-outs. The birds need to social distance to save themselves. And not to worry, they won’t starve without your supply.

“Although stopping feeding may seem like it will harm birds, in reality, they use feeders as just one source of food and will quickly disperse to find other food sources and in so doing, reduce transmission of this disease at feeding sites,” says Tempe Regan, Idaho Department of Fish and Game regional diversity biologist. “Sanitation is critical and it is your responsibility to ensure your feeders are not facilitating disease transmission.”

© Jamie McCaffrey / Flickr

Dogs & Cats

Disease transmission to humans is possible. In mammals, the symptoms are more like food poisoning, but pets are a bigger concern especially. The drowsy symptom mentioned above may cause a bird to stay on the ground when approached. Obviously, the same is true if it dies. That’s an easy meal for a predator allowing the disease to spread to and/or through your furry family member. Keep dogs and cats out of hunt mode in your neighborhood this spring. (And better yet, don’t allow your pets to roam freely and hunt wildlife, ever).

Refraining from feeding birds can be a bummer, especially those new to the birding hobby. But you can still watch what’s moving through without feeding it. The birds are still around. If you have a yard, you may want to consider incorporating natural landscaping that provides habitat without concentrating birds.

Backyard birding has become so popular that is has fueled a seed shortage. But now is not the time to search for seed. Keep the binoculars and field guides handy. For the time being, though, forego the feeding to help the birds you love.

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89 comments

  1. Jean Luc Pallard says:

    I never give birds wild bird food. They’re already wild.

  2. Wendy Meyers says:

    I live in Minnesota, and have taken to cleaning my bird baths and feeder every two weeks. No evidence of ill or sick birds to this point. Is there data regarding salmonella in birds in MN?

    1. Hi Wendy,
      This outbreak occurred in the western United States, but birds do move around. I would check with your state wildlife agency.

      Matt

  3. Annette says:

    Perhaps only scatter bird seed feed on the ground or a high surface like a flat roof,this will still feed the birds and avoid the need for feeders, it won’t stop the squirrels but will give the birds a chance to survive

  4. Andrea Folts says:

    We live in AZ. Backyard bird watching has changed our lives for the better, esp during the pandemic. However, we would NEVER do anything to hurt any of the wildlife. I’m wondering if dry drought here would prevent salmonella. I will wash the feeder regularly.

  5. Michele Seville says:

    Thank you. This was very helpful. It is heartbreaking that salmonella is further decimating our beloved bird population. I’m taking my feeder down and cleaning up the seeds on the ground first thing in the morning.

  6. Betty Heimer says:

    Can a back yard bird feeder affect chickens? I’ve recently lost 2 chickens one , one day and 5 days later another they both died the same way

  7. James Musser says:

    As we await the return of Humming Birds to southeastern PA, it’s sad to read of the plight occurring out west. I happened to see a large Martin house yesterday that was so filthy I hope that no bird would use it. In my opinion, as a practical matter, feeders should be cleaned between fillings as opposed to a fixed interval. Currently we are seeing a family of Eastern bluebirds, and a family of Red Finches at our feeders. The Bluebirds are the first we have ever seen in the 45 yrs we have lived here.

  8. Denny Liska says:

    I put out a bird feeder for the 1st time in my life and am enjoying the various birds that are feeding there. I live in central Florida, is this a concern here?

    1. Hi Denny,
      The salmonella outbreak has not been documented in Florida this year. However, it is still good practice to clean and sanitize your feeders regularly.

      Thanks,
      Matt Miller

  9. Jackie Honefenger says:

    I’m in Houston Texas. This is so so sad. I have an array of 3 feeders. 2 are metal with pencil sized bar that the pine siskins line up on to eat. The other is a vertical tube feeder. My mixed flock numbers above 50 birds that regularly congregate at my feeders very nearly at the same time. I know there are more than two dozen pine siskins. They are delightful to watch. There’s a young family of 6 cardinals. My new home office overlooks the yard (abutting a park so lots of open space) and I’ve been looking for signs of sick birds since Houston put out this Salmonella alert. Sadly, this morning, I found a sick siskin on the ground and could do no more for it than carry it in gloves out to some brush and leave it there. No time to take it to the rescue and I’ve heard they don’t survive long. I’ve taken down the feeders. It’s heartbreaking to see all the birds coming for their regular feed time and look lost. I’ll miss them.

  10. Carol L. Schumacher says:

    Why aren’t we seeing gold finches at our feeders in Grand Rapids, Michigan? Could it be the salmonella outbreak? I cleaned both feeders and used fresh niger seed Thank you.