Q: I really worried about my back-yard birds during the brutally cold weather in January. How do they stand living outdoors at such times?

A: You're right to suspect that extreme cold is very hard on birds and other wildlife. Even though our resident birds live here year-round, they still suffer through prolonged bad weather. Birds use a variety of strategies to cope with extreme cold. Many shiver through the night, which helps maintain their body heat. But this burns through their fat reserves, so they wake up eager for a meal. Birds puff out their feathers to trap an insulating layer of air near their bodies, they squat down to cover their bare legs and seek shelter frequently during the day. You'll often find a group of birds in any sunny spot that's protected from the wind to help conserve their body heat. Still, when the weather turns brutal, only the strongest survive.

Swan count

Q: I was pleased to read on this page that trumpeter swans numbered in the thousands, as I thought their numbers were still low. What are the estimated populations of tundra and trumpeter swans in North America, and is it possible to distinguish between the two species in flight?

A: The Trumpeter Swan Society is reporting 46,225 trumpeters in North America. There are about 10,000 trumpeters in our region, about 25,000 in the Pacific Coast population and about 10,000 in Rocky Mountain flocks. This is great news, because this handsome bird nearly became extinct in the early 1900s. A census taken every five years (the most recent was in 2010) shows the trumpeter population steadily increasing. Tundra swans are a much more abundant species. The Western population is estimated at 100,000 and in the Eastern region, some of whose birds migrate through our area, there are another 100,000.

It's a challenge to tell these big, all-white birds apart in flight — even veteran swan watchers hope to hear swans calling, because their voices are very different. You can hear the two species' calls at the first link below, and find some I.D. tips at the second. In our area, if you see swans in winter, they're almost surely trumpeters. In the fall, if you see four or five swans together, they're probably a family group, and thus trumpeters, since these move around as a family. If you see a large V of swans passing overhead, chances are that they're tundras. Links: www.trumpeterswansociety.org/swan-voice.html; www.trumpeterswansociety.org/swan-identification.html.

Droopy downy

Q: A downy woodpecker visits our feeder several times a day and after eating he hangs onto the feeder for a half-hour or more. He puffs out his feathers, eats again, and then flies off. Is this related to the cold weather?

A: Your downy woodpecker sounds like one in my back yard, who hangs onto the feeder for a few minutes after eating. It's possible that your woodpecker is a healthy bird who figures it's too much trouble to fly to shelter to digest its meal, so it just stays at the table, so to speak, until it's time to eat again. It's also possible that the downy is impaired by injury or illness and only has enough strength for a couple of flights each day. During this brutal winter, many birds are showing signs of exposure, and some are not going to make it.

Cold showers

Q: I've seen conflicting advice on whether to maintain a heated birdbath on very cold days. Does it harm birds to take a bath when it's 10-below?

A: I'm not surprised that you're confused. Experts used to advise us to prevent birds from bathing on very cold days but the conventional wisdom now is that it's not harmful. Here's what the National Audubon Society says: "While it would seem that winter bathing would put birds at risk, actually they can do it quite safely. This is because the feathers of a healthy bird shed most of the water, preventing it from leaking through to the insulating down and skin below."

Birds need to bathe, even in winter, to clean off dirt that would otherwise interfere with their feathers' ability to lock out cold and moisture. Out in nature, birds often bathe in shallow water along flowing streams in winter.

Breakfast in bed

Q: Where do little birds like chickadees sleep at night?

A: Chickadees sleep in holes in trees, when they can find them, or in places where tree or shrub branches form a dense shelter. They prefer a small cavity for sleeping, since this conserves body heat. Cramped quarters may result in a bent tail as the bird emerges in the morning, but these will straighten out during the day. Chickadees are known to cache food in their night roosts, so their cavities often contain a few sunflower seeds for an early-morning meal. Other small birds, such as juncos and goldfinches, perch near the trunk of dense coniferous trees, providing shelter from the wind. There are reports of juncos diving into snow to spend the night, and I recently observed a junco in the late afternoon heading into a snow cave formed at the edge of our roof and the end of the rain gutter.

Creeper tip

Brown creepers need the calories provided by suet in cold weather, but they avoid bird feeders. Mount a suet cage on a tree trunk for creepers, says reader Don Grussing, and you're "almost assured of seeing these tiny birds," especially when no other birds are around (they're shy). He brushes away the snow below the feeder so creepers can pick up suet morsels the other birds drop.

St. Paul resident Val Cunningham, who volunteers with the St. Paul Audubon Society and writes about nature for local, regional and national newspapers and magazines, can be reached at val​writes@comcast.net.