Sponsored by

The Oregon Blueberry Commission
&
The Washington Blueberry Commission

Habitat Enhancement

Kestrel box on a perch post
The purpose of habitat enhancement is to draw native and migrating raptors to your field. However, raptors need a healthy prey population to sustain themselves.

By adding raptor habitat you can help maintain a balance between predator and prey in an area, but habitat enhancement may not provide bullet-proof pest bird management.

Click on the tabs below to open or close for more information.

The first step in drawing in raptors

Maintain what you already have. You can do this by observing what raptors are already present and working in your field before you make any changes regarding bird management. Ask yourself:

  1. When during year are raptors flying in my area?

  2. Are these migratory or resident raptors?

  3. At what times of day are these raptors flying?

  4. What do they seem to be chasing or eating?

  5. Is there a large natural perch in the area that raptors are using?

Click here for some ways to evaluate how well your habitat enhancement is working.


The second step in drawing in raptors

Take active measures, such as altering habitat, to increase raptor populations. In this guide, we take a close look at two types of raptor habitat enhancement:

Perches, which allow raptors to reduce energy expended on hunting. It can also be an unobtrusive, low-cost method for attracting raptors and maintaining raptor presence in an area.

Nesting boxes, which also have the potential to enhance raptor habitat. Unlike other raptors, kestrels seek cavities, making them one of the few daytime raptors we can attract with bird boxes.


Click here for more information on Perches.

Click here for more information on Nesting Boxes.