How to Go Birding by Tree

A New York City naturalist shares his unique approach of matching trees to certain bird species.

When Ken Chaya first began birding in Manhattans famed Central Park 30 years ago, he took the same approach as everyone else, relying entirely on his eyes, binoculars, and ears to detect species in the leafy canopy.

Nowadays, Chaya still carries binoculars around his necktwo pairs, in factand listens closely for birdsongs. But hes adopted another nifty technique: tree telepathy. As a botanical expert whos known in some circles as the tree guy, hes gained a deep understanding of birds habitat preferencesone that goes beyond the write-ups found in ordinary field guides. By linking certain birds to very specific types of flora, he often knows what to expect without even looking up.

The practice of birding by tree can fly anywhere, Chaya says, but its especially useful in Central Park, which has an astounding 183 tree and woody-shrub species. Chaya knows every single one: In 2011, he co-created an incredibly detailed that covers the 843-acre oasis. (Hes also a freelance graphic designer, nature-walk leader, and author of an upcoming book on Central Park.) No matter what the bird eats, whether its insects, insect eggs, larvae, sap, seeds, fruit, spiders, spider mitestheres something here for them, he says.

Here are Chayas most helpful observations from his forays in the woods:

Black Locusts

Hard and durable, black locusts are tailor-made for Red-bellied Woodpeckers, which cache food in their deeply ridged bark. Theyll take an acorn and pound it right in there, Chaya says. Their hiding spots dont fool everyone; Chaya often sees Blue Jays raiding the stashes as soon as the woodpeckers leave. Red-bellieds also carve nesting cavities into black locusts. This, too, attracts unwanted visitors: Sometimes starlings wait for them to do all the work and then drive them out, adds Chaya.

Bayberries

In winter, Yellow-rumped Warblers can survive almost entirely on bayberries, a fruit which no other warbler can digest. As a result, this species is able to survive much farther north than the rest of the parulids. Central Park doesnt have any bayberries, but during the colder months, Chaya sees Yellow-rumpeds just a few miles away along the coast, including at Plumb Beach in Brooklyn and Jones Beach on Long Island.

Sweet Birches

Like kids on a candy binge, Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers frequent sweet birches, puncturing orderly rows of holes in the bark to tap the riches within. Last fall, Chaya watched a sapsucker pound away at a pair of adjacent sweet birches until they were riddled like Swiss cheese. When he returned the following day, he discovered a 15-foot sap lick that had attracted more Yellow-bellieds, bees, wasps, flies, and other avian species. I tasted it myself, Chaya says. Very sweet! Sugar maples, of course, are another sapsucker favorite.

Crab Apples

For birds, food can be hard to come by during snowstorms. Luckily, Central Park has many trees that retain their fruit all winter, providing sustenance for American Robins, Northern Mockingbirds, and other berry eaters. Hardy birders might do well to stake these places out. This January, after a blizzard dropped a on the park, Chaya observed a flock of robins gorging on old, shriveled crab apples the size of raisins.

Beeches and Oaks

Most of Central Parks deciduous trees go completely bare in winter. But American beeches and oaksparticularly juvenile onestend to hang on to bunches of brown, withered leaves: a phenomenon known as marcescence. These marcescent clusters provide an ideal setting for insects to lay eggs, Chaya says. When the larvae hatch in spring, Worm-eating Warblers and other songbirds descend on the leaves to feast. 

Oak Catkins

Warblers are arguably the most sought-after spring migrants. In Central Park, the flowery catkins on oak trees are really the best place to find them. In [late April and early May] the catkins are warbler magnets because theyre insect magnets, Chaya says. Wasps, caterpillars, and aphids are all attracted to these male inflorescences.

Tulip Trees

When theyre in full bloom in May, tulip trees serve as another warbler hotspot, thanks to the insects that flock to their spectacular flowers (which superficially resemble garden tulips). The Tennessee Warbler, an uncommon visitor to Central Park, seems to especially favor them, Chaya says. In addition to snatching up bugs, he suspects the species may drink the flowers nectar.

These little tips are just the beginning; theres still so much we dont know, Chaya says. Each changing season brings a fresh set of behaviors for him to uncover and learn. Im [in Central Park] all year-round because the show never stops, says Chaya. No matter how many hundreds and hundreds of miles Ive walked, I still find new things that interest me.