Perhaps we might equally well ask ourselves if our large colonies are a detriment to purple martins, predisposing them as they do to predation by hawks and owls.Mark, that is a very misleading statement...only in the last 40 years have we seen an explosion in the number of martin colonies in the U. S. , beginning with the introduction of the Trio houses in the early 1960's. Prior to that, hawks and martins DID exist together, on a level playing field, with not nearly the concentrated levels of martins that are now seen.
Consequently, we are now seeing an explosion of hawk attacks on purple martin colonies.
Your failure to acknowledge the fact that the dynamic has changed only shows what we on this forum already know..........you are an unapologetic advocate of hawks. This forum is for the growth and welfare of purple martins.............hawks are a detriment to purple martins...........maybe your views would find a more receptive audience on the Hawk Forum.
In my area the average martin colony size is something in the area of three pairs occupying one or two twelve-room houses. Sparrows especially certainly play a role in limiting colony size by the simple mechanism of plugging house cavities with their nests. Starlings are not nearly as numerous in local martin housing (the old style 6x6 cavity is less than ideal for starlings apparently) but must kill local martins each year and destroy many more martin nests.
I do believe though that the large numbers of Cooper's and Sharp-shinned Hawks overwintering here in the city and especially passing through in migration until the end of April must have a powerful effect on limiting colony size. We have forty pairs here at school, but we are set in a relatively open location. Most colonies around here are sitting ducks.
Yet... we still have martins ...and Cooper's and sharpies.
I have lived here for going on twenty years now, and all three of these species have been common sights in this city for at least that long.
Me, I would say I like Purple Martins and Cooper's and Sharp-shinned Hawks about equally well, and don't much care about what sort of silly labels I might get stuck with by a few folks here.
What I do worry about is how some folks might feel like leaving when their posts are ridiculed with such things as "LMAO"
Mike Scully
