Warning issued to anyone with magpies in garden in January

Eurasian magpie foraging in snow covered meadow in winter.

Anyone who has magpies in their garden has been warned (Image: Getty)

They are one of the most divisive birds found in our gardens, with many people decrying magpies as vicious, disruptive animals which ruin lawns or kill friendly birds.

But gardeners are being warned that you shouldn’t get rid of magpies in your – because they actually chase down and remove .

Magpies, in the corvid family, are omnivirous and will eat meat as well as nuts and seeds, and in fact have been known to attack other songbirds like thrushes and steal their eggs.

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It’s led to many gardeners looking for ways to deter magpies or stop magpies from coming into .

But and wildlife experts have said that despite their rather infamous reputation, magpies are actually good to have around.

Bird food supplier GardenBird says: “As an omnivorous, voracious scavenger, the Magpie is firmly within the curious realm of what one could call the canon of contentious garden birds; a marmite, if you like, of love and hate, similar to the Jay, and anything but, for example, the gentle, loveable Long-tailed tit.

“But there are always two sides to the coin: yes, Magpies have been accused of stealing and consuming the eggs of innocent garden birds, but they have also been seen as incredibly adept at warding off similarly dangerous pests.

“Over the past two decades and beyond, magpies have shot up in number across the UK, and are now among the most commonly observed garden birds in the UK. But along with this rapid increase in population has arisen a most abundant form of hatred among people, and this is, apparently, put down mainly to their “cheeky behaviour”. This, however, can’t be the whole truth, and one author, Steve Roud, believes it could be related to the deep superstitions held in traditional British folklore, which links the Magpie to the devil.”

Now, gardeners are being urged to leave out foods that magpies will eat, such as kitchen scraps, as well as fruits like raisins and sultanas, oats, nuts and even raw meat such as diced raw chicken.

Eurasian magpie in flight against blue sky.

Magpies are actually beneficial to gardens according to experts (Image: Getty)

Many of these foods – especially the meat – won’t be taken by other birds or squirrels, so will serve the dual purpose of feeding hungry magpies and keeping them away from other birds or their eggs.

Magpies will then hunt down insects, slugs, snails and other pests in your garden, lending you a hand to control these unwanted invaders.

They’ll even remove dead birds and other unwanted dead matter in your garden for you.

Ark Wildlife adds: “Magpies mainly eat insects, but also small mammals, birds (and their eggs and young), worms, molluscs, berries, grains and vegetable matter, such as nuts.

Magpies are known to be scavengers and will happily eat any leftover scraps found on bird tables or beneath bird feeders!”

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