Nature Canada Purple Martin Project
Nature Canada Purple Martin Project
Swallow Project
Have a look at an Interesting Article posted on the Nature Canada Page
It’s a Bad Spring for Purple Martins and Their Cousin Swallows Here’s How You Can Help
Introduction from Ted Cheskey, Nature Canada’s Naturalist Director
Saving swallows has been a Nature Canada priority for the last two years. The Save Our Swallows program grew from our work to help the purple martin—one of the most remarkable species of swallow in North America.
The breeding range of purple martins extends across the country, from Nova Scotia to southern British Columbia. As with all Canadian swallows, purple martin populations have declined significantly over the last several decades. This is especially true east of Saskatchewan, where numbers have dropped by between 50 and 95 percent.
Martins arrive from their wintering grounds in Brazil between mid-April and mid-May and depart from their Canadian colony sites by early August. That leaves a small window of time for reproduction. A spring cold snap in Canada means their essential food—flying insects such as mayflies, damselflies, and dragonflies—is not available. The result is often tragic: starvation and death.
That outcome is particularly difficult for hundreds (if not thousands) of volunteers dedicated to providing purple martins with breeding habitat. Purple martins east of the Canadian Rockies are entirely dependent on human-constructed housing to offer safe and adequate nesting space.
Here’s how John Balga, one volunteer Purple Martin Steward, is helping the returning swallows get through these tough, cold springs.