Q: Do seed-eating birds taste their food before they eat it? How can a bird like a cardinal tell if a seed is good to eat before they swallow it?
A: Excellent questions and although there hasn't been much research into this topic, the few studies there are point toward birds having a sense of taste. Hummingbirds can detect differences in sugar concentrations in feeders and natural nectar, fruit-eating birds can taste the difference between ripe and unripe fruit and birds avoid monarch caterpillars because these are extremely bitter. Tests have shown that many birds, including Northern cardinals, have a preference for black-oiler sunflower seeds at feeders. Tim Birkhead, British biology professor and author, in his excellent book, "Bird Sense," writes that it is improbable that birds could function without a sense of taste — they need to differentiate between edible and nonedible and even dangerous food items.

Picky eaters
Q: We'd been offering our birds suet plugs that contain nuts and insects, but recently added a feeder with a suet cake cage. Now the birds ignore the plugs and only eat the suet cakes. Is this what we should have expected?
A: Your birds are acting almost like cats, with their switch in suet loyalties. They're telling you that they prefer something about the suet cakes: Maybe there's more animal fat in the cakes and this gives them more of an energy boost, or maybe they taste better. I'd go with the flow and if they want suet cakes, then I'd continue to offer them.
Popular nest site
Q: I seem to have a popular nest box in my backyard: Within an hour of putting it up in the spring, a pair of chickadees took it over. The day they fledged their young, a pair of house wrens began adding sticks and raised seven young wrens. Now a female downy woodpecker has enlarged the entrance hole and spends some time inside. Is she planning to use the nest box in the spring, or was she just looking for insects inside?
A: Your nest box was amazingly popular, and it's wonderful to hear that both chickadees and house wrens brought off their broods successfully. As for the woodpecker, I'd suspect she is planning to use it as a roost box during winter nights, and the fact that she enlarged the entry makes this seem likely. This happens often on my bluebird trail, with downies pecking around the entry to make it larger, then settling in for the winter. This isn't a problem except for the few who apparently get bored during the long nights and spend idle time enlarging the ventilation holes (causing more entry points for rain in the summer). It's nice that they can shelter during the winter, so I don't bug them about it.