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 Purple
Martin Management Tips
Educate yourself
first
Dont make the mistake of buying or building a
martin house before thoroughly researching the subject.
You may find out after investing money, time, and hard
work, that your yard is too tree enclosed for martins, or
your martin house is difficult or impossible to manage.
Choose the right
location
One of the major reasons people fail to attract martins
is that they place the martin housing incorrectly.
Martins have very specific space requirements. Their
housing should be in the center of the largest open spot
available, about 30-120 feet from human housing. Place
the housing where you can see it so you can enjoy
watching and hearing the martins. There should be no
trees within 40 feet, preferably 60 feet. In the southern
half of their breeding range, martins are less fussy
about house placement, so sometimes housing can be within
25 feet of trees and still attract martins. But the
farther housing is placed from trees, the better. Housing
height should be about 10-15 feet. Dont attach
wires to the house or pole, especially if they lead to
trees, buildings, or the ground. Predators can use the
wires to access the housing.
Put up manageable
housing
Your chances for success will be better if your housing
is easy to manage. Choose a pole that telescopes. White
housing attract martins best, and reflects sunlight,
keeping nestlings cooler. Make sure there is adequate
ventilation and drainage in each compartment.
Open housing at
the right time, and don't close it too soon
Adult martins are rarely attracted to new breeding sites
they return to the sites where they bred
previously. Typically, it is subadult martins (last
years young) that colonize new sites, and they
begin arriving about 4 weeks after the first adults. At
new sites, opening housing when the scouts
are due decreases chances of attracting martins by giving
House Sparrows and starlings 4 weeks to claim the site
before the subadult martins arrive. To improve your
chances, keep housing closed until it's time for
subadults to arrive. At active sites, the first martins
usually show up within a week or two of previous
years arrival dates. Have your housing ready, but
keep it closed until some martins return. Migration is a
drawn-out affair, with martins arriving for 8-12 weeks in
the north, 16-20 weeks in the south. Martins can arrive
and begin nesting up through the end of June, so keep
your housing ready; don't close it up, or let other birds
use it.
Practice active
management by controlling House Sparrows and European
Starlings
Starlings and House Sparrows will take over compartments,
destroy eggs, kill nestlings, and prevent martins from
nesting at unestablished sites. Adult martins are often
injured or killed by starlings. Successful martin
landlords do not tolerate these nonnative nest-site
competitors. Starlings and House Sparrows are not
protected (since they are not native birds) and may be
controlled by trapping, shooting, and nest tear-outs. You
can also use the starling-resistant entrance. If native
birds (tree swallows, wrens, bluebirds, or flycatchers)
try to nest in your martin housing, close it and put up
single-unit boxes for these desirable species elsewhere
on your property. Reopen the martin housing only after
the new box has been accepted.
Conduct weekly
nest checks, daily walk-unders, and keep written records
Although many landlords are reluctant to lower their
housing during the breeding season to peek in on their
tenants, it's one of the most valuable practices
landlords can adopt. Nest checks will not cause martins
to abandon their young. If your martin housing raises and
lowers vertically, as it should, number the compartments,
check nests weekly, and keep written records. Landlords
who conduct regular nest checks will be more successful,
simply because theyll discover any problems that
occur in time to correct them. In addition to weekly
checks, walk under the housing daily to look for plucked
martin feathers, thrown-out nestlings, dropped insect
prey, hatched eggshells, etc. The items you find are
clues to what's going on and may alert you to problems
that need attention.
Keep your martin
housing in good repair
Remove nests and scrub housing with a 10% bleach solution
(1 part bleach to 9 parts water) in the fall. Rinse and
air dry before storing or closing for the winter. Take
care of any needed repairs now, so you won't be caught
unprepared next spring. All types of housing will last
longer if stored indoors over the winter. If housing is
left out, plug the holes, otherwise House Sparrows and
starlings will claim it in late winter and be impossible
to dislodge come spring.
Be prepared for
problems
Keep the phone number of a licensed wildlife
rehabilitator handy; a rehabber is a sick or injured
bird's best chance for survival. Place fallouts back in
the nest; if that's not possible, take them to a
rehabber. Don't try to raise them yourself; its
illegal and your good intentions cannot replace the
experience and skills of a rehab specialist. If parasites
or wet nests threaten the survival of nestlings, replace
the nest material with clean, dry wood shavings. Parasite
numbers can also be reduced by placing freshwater DE
(diatomaceous earth) in compartments. Never use
pesticides in nest boxes; it's illegal and they are not
safe for wild birds and nestlings.
Supply these aids
Crushed, dried eggshell or oystershell is a valuable
dietary supplement that supplies calcium and grit, and
helps prevent calcium deficiencies in nestlings. Offer it
all season in an open feeder. Eggshells should be rinsed,
dried thoroughly in the sun or a 350 degree oven, then
crushed into small pieces. Landlords can also put nest
material out for their birds. Dried pine needles, dry
twigs, or a bale of straw scattered in an open area will
be used by the martins. Create a supply of mud for them
by soaking an area of ground with a hose.
Work with other
martin enthusiasts in your community
Martin landlords are a very friendly bunch of people, so
don't be shy. Stop and introduce yourself to other
landlords, and make some new friends. Ask the local
newspaper to do a story on martins, and have meetings to
share information. Consider hosting an open
house at your colony site for those interested in
martins. And, if you can help area landlords become
better educated and more involved in management,
youll assure a better supply of fledglings each
season to help martin populations thrive again.
Visit Shaw Creek
Bird Supply to see our selection of Purple
Martin Houses.
Copyright © 2003 Shaw Creek
Bird Supply
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