I have recently been re-reading "The Life of Bees" by the Belgian author, Maurice Maeterlinck, (1862-1949) and also looking again at some details of the work of the Austrian ethologist, Karl von Frisch (1886-1949). The latter's research on the mystery of the honey bee's 'waggle dance' at the entrance to the hive led him to discover that the bee was physically communicating to other members of the hive regarding the location of an abundant nectar source.......and it all set my mind on thinking about the nature and manner of the appearance of Goldfinches in my garden at the (new) nyjer seed feeders.
I have had no nyjer seed feeders in my garden over the winter as I had done a lot of re-seeding of my lawn last autumn and I didn't want any nyjer seed Goldfinches discovering my grass seed. Eventually, I put out the nyjer seed feeders once the grass seed had become well established as sprouting grass, and that happened in late February. Meanwhile, I had seen no Goldfinches at all in or over the garden during the winter months.
As I have noticed over the years, a flock of Goldfinches didn't now just appear overnight in the garden after the seed had been put out, but it all proceeded thus : within a couple of days or so one single Goldfinch appeared on the nyjer seeds ; followed within a day by another 1..... then by 2.....by 4....by 6 and so on : a usual pattern. It wasn't just 1 bird soon followed by a flock but a steady build-up.
So, was it just a case of the odd foraging bird flying over, seeing the feeders and flying down to join Goldfinch No. 1, or just a case of Goldfinch No.2/No.3,etc aimlessly following No. 1 and happening to find the feeders ? I suppose larger numbers appearing at the feeders could also be the result of a form of avian telepathy we just don't understand. Or could Goldfinches, like the honey bees, perhaps communicate by more physical means, which other Goldfinches understand, that there is a good food source available nearby? Does a successful forager (Goldfinch No. 1) after discovering and feeding on the nyjer seeds then locate, by accident or design, other odd foraging Goldfinches in the area and, by specific head and wing movements, perform the equivalent of the honey bee's "waggle dance" to indicate a nearby food source.....and they then 'follow the leader' to that food source. Goldfinches No.2 and 3 could do the same and so the feeding group builds up.
Goldfinches and other sociable birds could be instinctively wired up to understand that by its specific body language another Goldfinch is indicating a food source and accompany it to where that food source is. Could that behaviour perhaps be just one of the strategies that sociable birds have evolved to see them safely through the winter period of limited food sources?
In the harsh Natural World, food serendipity or the fortunate finding of food by chance is not really an acceptable constant norm for the survival of sociable species. We have all seen single birds in the winter foraging well away from their main flock members. Do the successful ones then report back to other members of the flock?
Do sociable birds in general sometimes (not always but sometimes) rely on lone foragers reporting by appropriate body language the good news that there is a good food source in the area? Does an older bird of a group sometimes instinctively assume this role of reporting forager? So,if sociable bees can communicate food source information by body language to other bees, why shouldn't sociable birds have evolved strategies to do the same to other birds?
Finally, perhaps "ornithologists" will dismiss my post as the misguided ramblings of a typical amateur birder......but then, I suppose I (a typical amateur birder) would be in good company : the same ridicule was directed at Karl von Frisch (a professional scientist, admittedly) when he suggested "waggle dancing" as a form of nectar source communication amongst bees.
Freddy
PS. Any comments on the above would be welcome.