Winter 2025
Creating a Winter Habitat for Wildlife by Providing Food and Shelter
by Robin Mitchell
With that context in mind, the primary habitat needs for winter wildlife are shelter and food. While many articles about wildlife habitat also mention water as a key element, providing water for wildlife can be problematic since it needs to be cleaned and refilled often to prevent the spread of disease. Additionally, because winter is our rainy season, water should be generally available for wildlife, unless there is a drought.
Both food and shelter are best provided through native plants, which the native wildlife have evolved with and are adapted to.
Shelter
Many insects are dormant during our winter. For example, many native bees spend the winter sheltering underground, or in dead plant material, (such as leaf-cutter bees.) https://ucanr.edu/sites/ccpestmanagement/files/237336.pdf. This is why it’s important to leave some ground bare for ground-nesting bees.
For birds, it is important to have shrubs and trees which provide shelter from both weather and predators. Evergreen, dense shrubs and trees will provide the best protection.
Food
You can provide food for wildlife with native plants, which naturally produce nectar, pollen, seeds, and fruit, rather than relying on artificial feeding stations to provide that service.
The western population of the Monarch butterfly spend their winters on the California coast, and their needs during that time are not milkweed, because that is food for their caterpillars, and the butterflies should be in reproductive diapause (i.e., not producing caterpillars) when overwintering. What they need most is nectar from plants that bloom in the winter.
Native plants that provide shelter and food
These include:
- Manzanita (Arctostaphylos manzanita): Their winter blossoms provide nectar for Monarch butterflies, native bumble bees, and hummingbirds; their berries are food for birds; their dense foliage provides shelter for birds.
- California Lilac (Ceanothus): winter and early spring blossoms provide pollen and nectar for bees and other insects; their berry-like fruits provide food for birds; their dense foliage provides shelter
- Toyon (Heteromeles arbutifolia): Their bright red fruits mature in fall and winter and provide food for many bird species
- Silktassel (Garrya elliptica): Coast silktassel flowers in winter and early spring, providing pollen and nectar for native bees and butterflies; later the small berry-like fruits provide food for birds and other wildlife
Resources
Winter Blooms for Garden Pollinators
https://ccmg.ucanr.edu/News_to_Grow_By/?story=2705
Plant Native Shrubs Now for Winter and Spring Bloom
https://ccmg.ucanr.edu/News_to_Grow_By/?story=2664
Winter Gardens for the Birds
https://ccmg.ucanr.edu/News_to_Grow_By/?story=2663
Creating a Wildlife Habitat
https://ccmg.ucanr.edu/News_to_Grow_By/?story=2461
California Native Bees
https://files.constantcontact.com/c2115e3d101/cf28e3ea-97b4-4111-af36-12a27317389d.pdf
Gardening for Butterflies
https://files.constantcontact.com/c2115e3d101/b67fe1b6-e9ce-428f-8602-a37a20b37052.pdf