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Using Meal Worms to Feed Birds | Have you Ever Done It?

Hi All! Why feed meal worms to the birds? Because so many birds eat insects naturally, feeding meal worms to the birds seems like a natural thing to do. How many of you have used mealworms to attract backyard birds?


What Are Meal Worms?

Do you know what meal worms actually are? Meal worms are the larvae of the beetle Tenebrio molitor. This larvae stage typically lasts for 10 weeks.

What Kinds of Birds Like Mealworms?

Birds such as chickadees, bluebirds, wrens and woodpeckers will eat meal worms if they are placed in a feeder accessible to the birds. Because meal worms can crawl, it is best to place them in a feeder where they cannot crawl out.

What Kind of Feeder Do I Need?

A bluebird feeder (shown here) works well for feeding meal worms to smaller birds. Any feeder that has smooth sides and can be easily accessed by the birds can be used as a meal worm feeder. A simple tray or platform can also be used, but, it is possible that the worms will crawl out. Placing the worms in a shallow bowl in the middle of the tray may help. Birds typically look for food around the same time each day, so worms can be placed in a tray daily around that time.

How Long Do Meal Worms Keep?

Meal worms can be purchased and kept for weeks at 40 - 50 degrees F. For longer storage they should be placed in bran flakes, wheat bran or corn meal in a container having air holes. A potato or apple slice should be kept in the container for the worms to use as a moisture source.

To maintain the larvae in a state of dormancy, they must be refrigerated at 40 to 50 degrees F (lower temperatures can kill the larvae).

Enjoy!

You can get a lot of enjoyment from watching birds eat meal worms, and the meal worms are quite a treat for the birds!

Brought to you by Wild Birds Unlimited

Views: 28

Tags: bird, feed, feeder, food, meal, mealworms, worms

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Comment by Wild Birds Unlimited, Inc. on February 10, 2012 at 3:53pm

Thanks for sharing Laura. Sounds like you're keeping your backyard birds happy :)

Comment by Landra Godfrey on February 2, 2012 at 4:30pm

I offer the live mealworms spring and summer and supplement with the dried mealworms in the fall and winter.  Bluebirds, Mockingbirds, Catbirds and Nuthatches are just a few that frequent the feeders.  

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