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 Attracting
& Managing Purple Martins
Over one million North
Americans put up housing for Purple Martins.
Unfortunately, many of these folks are unable to attract
breeding martins. The advice given here will increase
your chances of attracting martins. Once martins nest at
your location, they will come back every year, if you
manage the site properly.
Landlords who lose their entire colony from one year to
the next often suspect their flock died in a
storm during migration or was poisoned by pesticides on
their wintering grounds. These scenarios are unlikely;
the martins that share a breeding site do not migrate or
overwinter as a colony. The reason for total colony loss
is most often the result of something that happened in
the landlords own back yard, during the nesting
season. Good management practices can prevent or minimize
most of these problems.
Location
The major reason people fail to attract martins is that
martin housing is not placed correctly, or their site is
inappropriate martin habitat to begin with. Martins have
very specific aerial space requirements. Housing should
be placed in the center of the most open spot available,
about 30-120 feet from human housing. There should be no
trees taller than the martin housing within 40 feet,
preferably 60 feet. In the southern half of their
breeding range, martins are less particular about house
placement. Southern landlords can sometimes place housing
within 15-20 feet of trees, and still attract martins.
Generally, the farther housing is placed from trees, the
better. Height of the housing can be anywhere from 10-20
feet. Keep tall bushes, shrubs, and vines away from the
pole. Do not attach wires to a martin house, especially
if they lead to trees, buildings, or to the ground. If
your yard has too many trees near the martin housing,
relocate the housing to a more open area, mount the
housing higher, or prune (or remove) trees to create a
more open site.
Timing
Most would-be martin landlords rush to get
their martin housing opened up for the arrival of martin
scouts in their particular area. This is 4-5
weeks too early for new sites, and decreases chances for
success. Contrary to popular folklore, scouts
are not looking for new breeding sites for their flocks.
Scouts are simply the first martins to arrive
in, or pass through, an area on their way back to their
previous year's nesting sites. These martins aren't
likely to switch to new housing. Prospective landlords
should not open their housing until about four weeks
after the first martins are scheduled to return to their
area (see map). No matter where you live, keep your
housing open through June. Martins may arrive and begin
nesting as late as the end of June, anywhere in North
America. Landlords of active sites can leave their
housing completely closed up until the martins return and
land on the housing. Purple Martins exhibit a very high
level of site fidelity once they have bred
successfully at a specific location, the same individuals
return to breed there year after year.
Competition
If any other species is allowed to claim unoccupied
martin housing, martins are not likely to stay. All birds
set up territories around their nest sites and defend
them against other birds. When House Sparrows or European
Starlings lay first claim to martin housing, they fill
the compartments with their nests, chase off
investigating martins, fight with nesting martins, kill
nestlings, and break eggs. Allowing House Sparrows and
starlings to nest in martin housing will significantly
reduce martin occupancy and productivity. Controlling
nest-site competitors may require repeated lowerings of
the house for nest tear-outs, and in the case of the
nonnative House Sparrow and European Starling, trapping
and/or shooting. The starling-proof entrance hole can be
used to keep starlings from claiming martin housing.
Should native bird species (e.g., Tree Swallow, Eastern
Bluebird, Great Crested Flycatcher, etc.) try to take
over your empty martin housing, temporarily plug all the
entrance holes with door stops or paper cups, then put up
appropriate, single-unit housing elsewhere on your
property. Once they have accepted the new housing, reopen
the martin housing. Housing should be stored inside for
the winter, or closed up, to keep paper wasps, squirrels,
and other birds from claiming the house before the
martins return.
Housing
Houses and gourds should be painted white, or a light
pastel color; trim can be any color. White housing seems
to attract martins best. White housing reflects the heat
of the sun, keeping nestlings cooler. Compartment floor
dimensions should measure at least 6" x 6," but
7" x 12" offers better protection against
predators and weather, if starlings are controlled.
Compartment height can be from 4&1/2" to 6"
or 7." Place entrance holes about 1" above the
floor. Hole size can range from 1&3/4" up to
2&1/4." Many published plans for martin housing,
and some manufactured houses, are made to improper
dimensions, so if your housing is unsuccessful, check the
dimensions, and modify where needed. Look for housing
designed to raise and lower vertically, and with easy
access to compartments. Landlords may need to lower
housing daily to evict nest-site competitors, or to check
on martin nestlings. Systems that telescope up and down,
or raise and lower with a pulley and winch, are the most
practical. Nest checks will not cause martins to abandon
their nests or their colony site; number the compartments
and keep written records.
Replacing Active Housing
The same martins return each year, and may abandon the
site if the housing they are used to is gone, or
drastically altered. To safely replace a single active
house, place the new housing near the housing you plan to
remove, and give the martins an entire season to get used
to it. Do not remove the active housing until some of the
martins have accepted and bred in the new housing for at
least one season. Once martins have nested in the new
housing, you can remove the old house, or put an
additional new house in its place. Landlords with several
active houses can replace a house between seasons without
risk of colony loss.
Predation
The most common reason martins abandon their colony site
is because predators have raided their nests. It only
takes one foray up a martin pole by a snake, raccoon, or
squirrel, or a few visits by an owl, hawk or crow, to
cause all the surviving birds to abandon the site.
Landlords who don't conduct weekly nest checks may never
know their martins, nestlings, or eggs are disappearing.
All martin poles (wooden or metal) can easily be climbed
by predators and should be equipped with pole-guards.
Martin houses that have become regular targets for hawks,
owls, or crows should be equipped with external cage-type
guards. Landlords should be alert for evidence of
predation (e.g., dropped owl feathers, plucked martin
feathers, chewed-off martin wings, etc.) under martin
housing.
Weather extremes
Since martins feed solely on flying insects, they are
extremely vulnerable to weather conditions that affect
insect availability. Prolonged bad weather, such as rain,
snow, cool temperatures, and/or heavy winds, all reduce
or eliminate insect flight. If poor weather persists for
more than 4 or 5 days, martins begin to die of
starvation. Heat waves and droughts can also be a
problem. When air temperatures go above 100o F. for many
days, nestlings can perish from overheating. Prolonged
drought can also adversely affect insect numbers. Some
weather conditions may contribute to a population
explosion of some external parasites normally found in
martin nests, including fleas, nest mites, and blowfly
larvae. Never use pesticides in bird nests or boxes. The
safe way to reduce numbers of nest parasites is to remove
nest material (and nestlings), sprinkle 1 or 2 two
teaspoons of freshwater diatomaceous earth over the
floor, then replace the old nest material with clean, dry
wood shavings, pine straw (dried pine needles), or dry
straw. Shape a shallow bowl in the material, and place
the nestlings back in the nest.
Visit Shaw Creek
Bird Supply to see our selection of Purple
Martin Houses.
Copyright © 2003 Shaw Creek
Bird Supply
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