Here are more additions to the diet of Bohemian Waxwings during their winter 
2022-2023 visit to Colorado:

*Mike Britton reports them eating the cones of common juniper (Juniperus 
communis) at the Florissant Fossil Beds.  This woody plant is native to our 
mountains and has a low-growing, prostrate form.

*Bill Killam who lives in northwest Denver says they mostly ate crabapple 
fruits in his yard but also consumed the fruits of his "Blue Velvet" 
honeysuckle.  This is Lonicera korolkowii 'Floribunda', a cultivar developed at 
the famous Cheyenne Experiment Station just north of the Colorado border.  It 
is native to the mountains of central Asia, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Despite 
being exotic, it's a good choice for our area, part of the Plant Select program 
and has a low water requirement once established.

*Heather Weber-Langvardt of Wild Birds Unlimited Store #023 in Colorado Springs 
reports them eating the fruits of serviceberry (Amelanchier sp.) and elderberry 
(Sambucus sp.).  Colorado has a native species of serviceberry (two subspecies) 
and two species of native elderberries, one non-native elderberry.

The last edition of the column I write in "Colorado Birds" titled "The Hungry 
Bird" was about Bohemian Waxwings.  At the time of composition, all the reports 
I had read only mentioned four items (crabapples, Rocky Mountain juniper cones, 
Russian-olives and common buckthorn fruits).  Since asking for observations 
from COBIRDS readers, an additional seven items (the four above plus 
kinnikinnick berries, Siberian elm buds and rotten apples) should be on the CO 
list.  Doug Ward provided a nice summary of what they eat in northern Idaho.  
An addendum for the Bohemian waxwing diet in Colorado might well be part of the 
next article.

Thank you to everyone who has contributed to our understanding of this bird's 
food habits during the current invasion.

Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins

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