






Secure Shopping



|
 Purple
Martins in Western North America
Range & Migration
Map: Purple Martins, the largest swallow in
North America, are Neotropical migrants; they migrate
north in the spring to breed in Mexico, the United
States, and Canada. In late summer, after their young
have left the nest, they migrate south to their
nonbreeding range in South America. Martins are secondary
cavity nesters; this means they nest in a cavity, but do
not excavate the cavity themselves. Instead, they use old
woodpecker cavities, or natural cavities in dead trees,
cliff faces, etc. In the eastern half of North America,
Purple Martins have undergone what's known as a tradition
shift. Gradually, they have switched from using natural
cavities to artificial housing humans supply for them.
Native Americans started this tradition shift hundreds or
even thousands of years ago, by putting up dried,
hollowed-out gourds for the martins. Today, in the
eastern half of North America, martins are completely
dependent on supplied housing for breeding. They now nest
only in gourds and multi-compartment wood and metal
housing.
In the mountainous areas of western North America,
martins have not undergone this tradition shift and still
nest as all martins did originally, in natural tree
cavities and old woodpecker cavities. This means that
putting up an eastern-style martin house in western
mountainous areas likely would not attract breeding
martins, but no one has seriously tried with modern
attraction techniques. In the Pacific Northwest, where
martins once nested almost exclusively in cavities in
pilings along rivers and on the coast, they now nest
almost entirely in human-supplied housing in these same
habitats due to widespread nestbox programs. Here they
will nest in clusters of gourds and groupings of
single-unit wooden boxes. In Washington, Oregon, and the
southern tip of British Columbia, people who live on or
near the water can help martins by putting up such
housing.
In the
remainder of western North America (with the exception of
Alberta and Saskatchewan, where martins do use gourds and
multi-room houses), martins have not accepted any type of
nestboxes or gourds. In California, where martins nest in
cavities in trees, lava tubes, and road bridges, it may
be possible to attract them to gourds and single-unit
boxes. Martins in Arizona, New Mexico, and Mexico nest
only in cavities in trees and cacti.
The martin's breeding range is shown on the map in gray.
Horizontal lines mark average arrival dates of older
martins at established colony sites. Yearling martins,
the age-group that typically colonize new breeding sites,
dont begin arriving until 4-6 weeks after these
dates, and continue arriving for an additional 4-6 weeks
in the north, 10-12 weeks in the south. This means
martins can be attracted to new housing through mid-June
in the northwest. New hobbyists should not open housing
until 4-6 weeks after the dates shown here. Opening
earlier at new sites will result in the attraction of
nonnative, nest-site competitors (House Sparrows and
European Starlings), instead of martins. If you live in
an area where Purple Martins use artificial housing, and
are going to put up gourds or wooden boxes, follow the
timing schedule above for opening boxes.
Gourd Homes for Other Birds
Even if you do not live within the breeding range of
Purple Martins, or if the Purple Martins in your area do
not use gourds or nest boxes, there are many other kinds
of birds that will nest in wooden houses and gourds. Some
of the birds you might attract are: Mountain Bluebirds,
Western Bluebirds, Tree Swallows, and Violet-green
Swallows, plus several species of chickadees, wrens,
woodpeckers, flycatchers, titmice, owls, kestrels, and
nuthatches. For more information on housing for these
species, you can check with a local wild bird store, your
local Audubon Society chapter, or consult the local
library. The Complete Birdhouse Book, by Donald and
Lillian Stokes, or A Guide to Bird Homes, by Scott
Shalaway, are two good sources of information.
Each bird has its own habitat requirements, entrance hole
size, and cavity dimensions. For wrens, entrance holes
should be about 1", and the gourd about 5" or
6" in diameter. Their preferred habitat is near the
edge of a brushy area, in the shade. Chickadees
(1&1/4" entrance) like their nests in wooded
areas, while bluebirds, Tree and Violet-green Swallows
(1&1/2" entrance) like their housing out in wide
open areas. Flycatchers need an entrance hole
1&3/4" to 2", hung in a tree or near brushy
areas.
Gourd bird houses should be equipped with 4 to 6 drain
holes, and 2 hanging holes. The entrance hole should be
drilled so that it faces straight out; it should not tilt
up, or the gourd will admit too much rain, and it should
not tilt down, so that young won't fall out. If the
habitat of the bird you want to attract is open, and the
gourd will be in the sun, paint it white or a very light
beige or tan, to help reflect the sun's heat. Otherwise,
it can be painted a natural color or simply varnished to
protect it from the weather. Use plastic-coated wire to
suspend gourds.
Visit Shaw Creek
Bird Supply to see our selection of Purple
Martin Houses.
Copyright © 2003 Shaw Creek
Bird Supply
|