Purple Martins Housing & Nesting
Distribution and Breeding Habitat
Purple Martins are a migratory species that breeds along the West Coast and
in the eastern and central portions of the United States, and in parts of
Canada and Mexico. While martin populations have grown in the East, their
numbers have declined in the middle of the United States. This species nests
in open and semi-open areas, including savannas, cultivated lands, fields,
parks, pastures, near lakes and marshes and in towns and suburbs.
Purple
Martins can reach fairly high densities when nest boxes are present;
however, in other areas, they can be completely absent. In the West, martins
are less likely to inhabit nest boxes, relying more heavily on natural
cavities, but they will nest in gourds and supplied single-unit houses on
the West Coast.
Purple Martins nest in colonies, but members of the
breeding colony are not related.
Nesting Behavior
Nest Building: The breeding season begins in late March in the southern part
of the range, but not until late May or early June in the northern parts.
(In Florida, however, nest building can begin as early as February.)
As with
many native cavity-nesting species, Purple Martins compete with House
Sparrows and European Starlings for nest sites. In many regions, such as the
eastern United States, martins are extremely dependent on human-provided
nest boxes. In the West, however, Purple Martins nest more frequently in
natural sites, such as abandoned woodpecker holes, cliff crevices, and in
the cavities of oak, sycamore, ponderosa pine, and spruce trees.
Nest building starts about a month before the first egg is laid. Initially,
pairs may begin to build in more than one cavity. But eventually one cavity
is chosen, and the male and female build a nest made of grass, stems, twigs,
straw, bark, leaves, and mud. The nest cup is lined with fine grasses and
green leaves. Fresh green leaves are brought regularly until the eggs hatch.
The nest also has a mud or dirt rim that may prevent the eggs from rolling
out. This rim also helps keep the weather out, and it may restrict the reach
of Great Horned Owls.
Egg Laying: Females start laying eggs as early as April in southern regions
(in Florida, in early to mid-March), but they start later in northern
regions. The average clutch has four to six white, unmarked eggs. The age of
the female influences the clutch size; yearling females lay about one less
egg per clutch than older females.
Incubation: Females incubate their eggs for 15 to 16 days. When females are
absent from the nest, males may sit on the eggs or sit at the nest entrance
to guard it. Males may also stand over the eggs to prevent cooling.
Nestling Care: Hatching is asynchronous; that is, all of the eggs don't
hatch at once. Hatching may occur over two to three calendar days. Both
adults feed and care for the nestlings. The young fledge after 26 to 32
days; sometimes they stay in the nest longer. As the young leave the nest,
the parents try to keep their brood together, but family mixing within the
breeding colony often occurs. Sometimes the fledglings are mobbed by members
of the colony. The reason for this is uncertain. Some researchers believe
this prevents the fledglings from imprinting on the colony site. Others
believe it is to keep them from coming back to steal incoming food from
younger colony mates in neighboring compartments. The fledglings remain
dependent upon their parents for up to two weeks after leaving the nest.
Purple Martins have one brood per season. Two broods during one breeding
season is considered rare. They will re-nest if nest failure occurs early in
the nesting cycle.
Winter Movement and Dispersal
After the breeding season, Purple Martins assemble into large flocks.
Eventually these flocks migrate to parts of South America, including Brazil,
the Amazon basin, Bolivia, and Paraguay.
The Purple Martin Conservation Association reports that approximately 10% of
juvenile birds returns to their natal colony. Another 30% returns to the
general vicinity of their natal colony.
Source: Cornell Lab of Ornithology