Many birds come to enjoy Florida's mild winters and
year-round supply of food. One of the most common and abundant
winter visitors is the yellow-rumped warbler. When cold
temperatures drive the insects away, yellow-rumped warblers love to
feast on the small, waxy myrtle berries, the same berries once
collected by early settlers and boiled to make wax for candles. The
small berries are also eaten by cardinals, mockingbirds, quail,
white-eyed vireos, ruby-crowned kinglets and palm warblers, but the
yellow-rumped warbler has a longer digestive tract than other
warblers and so is uniquely adapted to absorb nutrients from the
slow-to-digest waxy substance. Put out a welcome mat for migratory
birds this winter and plant fast-growing, evergreen wax myrtle
shrubs. Make sure you buy seed-producing female plants and plant
them in sunny locations. Wax myrtles are also salt tolerant and
make a great hedge plant.
