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Cavity Nester ⌀ 2.5" Medium

Bufflehead

Bucephala albeola

Floor
7" × 7"
Interior height
16"
Entrance hole
⌀ 2.5"
Mount height
5–15 ft
Breeds
May–Jul
Broods / yr
1
Cool Facts

Things you didn't know about the Bufflehead

01

Buffleheads are the smallest diving duck in North America — about the size of a small grebe.

02

They almost exclusively nest in old Northern Flicker holes in aspen and pine — they can't excavate their own.

03

Their name comes from the disproportionately large head ('buffalo head'), especially obvious on males.

Attract Them

How to bring the Bufflehead to your yard

Buffleheads use small Wood-Duck-style nest boxes near small clear lakes in boreal country.

Box placement

Mount a 3" hole box 6–15 ft up on a tree near a small lake or pond. Wood shavings inside.

Food

Aquatic invertebrates and small fish — they dive.

Water

Clear cold lake or pond.

Avoid

Don't expect them outside the boreal lake region; they're a north-country specialty.

Range & Habitat

Where you'll find them

A small North American diving duck that breeds in northern boreal forest near small lakes.

By region
  • Boreal Canada & Alaska (breeding)

    Common breeder across Canada and Alaska wherever Flicker holes occur near lakes.

  • Northern US (breeding)

    Local breeder in northern Montana, Idaho, and western states.

  • Coastal US (winter)

    Massive winter flocks along both US coasts and through inland waters.

Habitat preferences

Small clear lakes and ponds in boreal forest; winter on coastal bays, estuaries, and inland reservoirs.

boreal ponds lakes near forests
Approximate range centroids — see the regional breakdown above for the specifics
Seasonal Care

When to install. When to clean.

Install by
By April (before ice-out)
Cleaning
September — refill with 3–4" shavings
Boreal Canada / Alaska
Primary breeding range — install on poles or trees beside small lakes and beaver ponds.

North America's smallest cavity-nesting duck; naturally reuses old Northern Flicker holes.