- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
In my post earlier today, I commented that I saw bird houses made of composite material (such as Trex) and was curious as to their thermal properties, since climate change is making many traditional house designs dangerous due to higher average temperatures.
After reading the articles below, it sounds as though composite lumber heats up faster, retains heat longer reaches higher temperatures, and also loses heat faster than traditional, unfinished softwood.
Even if the heat differential won’t kill the birds, it seems to have greater potential to stunt nestling growth and to increase dehydration risk.
I didn’t find any articles from birding groups about them being dangerous, but it seems very recent that they have been taking note of increased nest box death, so it may not have much research into it yet.
While the initial thought was something like this should last longer, stay prettier, and be easy to maintain sounded great, seeing it both holds more heat during the day and loses more at night sounds like a negative in both directions. It may be best to stick with unfinished wood.
I’m curious to hear anyone’s thoughts on this. Don’t take my hour of research as gospel. It just came up in conversation and I haven’t seen this discussed.
I’ll paste in my response in the other thread. I started this new post because it was getting buried pretty deep. I put in a number of issues with house design and lots of info about design criteria like that you mentioned.
As we eliminate natural habitat, I think man made shelter can help if it’s designed for the birds, not for the humans. You can’t shove any old bird in any old box.
It is true about predator access, and there are way more things that want to eat birds and eggs than most people think like squirrels and sparrows. Even if the house has that little post sticking out from under the hole can allow the wrong type of animal access to the nest.
Check the links below and you will have a ton of info to go through.
I think it’s nice they actually taught you all that! It’d be heartbreaking to put out a home to attract your favorite birds, only to see them out their babies get hurt because of it.