Strange Find?

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Dennis - AL
Posts: 103
Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 8:16 am
Location: Atmore, AL

I was doing a gourd check today and found an ASY male dead in one of my gourds without a head. It appears it was pulled completely from the torso. The head was not in the gourd either. No other damage to the bird's body.
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Dead ASY found without his head on 3.24.2013
Dead ASY found without his head on 3.24.2013
Dead ASY Male 3.24.2013.JPG (102.39 KiB) Viewed 9156 times
Persistence is not necessarily the key to success, but can be likened to the proverbial sand that brings forth a precious pearl.

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Craig Dyer
Posts: 500
Joined: Fri May 13, 2005 2:24 pm
Location: Nevada, TX
Martin Colony History: Area is rural. Offer 28 compartments...metal housing (Lonestar Goliad) & Supergourds all w/crescent entrance holes. Purple martins are abundant here and eager for quality, well maintained, safe housing. Expect near 100% occupancy this season.

Dennis,

I encountered the same thing once. In one of the gourds, a headless female. Very strange. I thought perhaps an owl or accipiter had grabbed and decapitated her as she was attempting to exit the gourd.
Craig Dyer
Laverne
Posts: 2216
Joined: Thu Jan 08, 2004 1:58 pm
Location: TX/Alvin
Martin Colony History: Erected 1st house in 1997. Birds were checking it out before Mike got down from the ladder. Six cavities had a little colony 1st year. Grown to 88 cavities all gourds with near 100% occupancy. Most important factor for success is rain = bugs.

Some landlords say this type of mutilation is actually a raccoon. I don't understand why they don't eat the meatier parts of the bird. Maybe they can't stomach that many feathers.

You're gonna need some predator baffles. Maybe this site will help you get started.

http://www.purplemartin.org/forumarchiv ... eguard.htm

Best wishes to you for a great season.
Sincerely,
Laverne
Dennis - AL
Posts: 103
Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 8:16 am
Location: Atmore, AL

Thanks Craig and Laverne for replying. I am perplexed as to what happened, but raccoons I am pretty sure are not the culprit. I live in town and in my 30+ years have never seen a raccoon.

My gourds are retrofitted with SREH entrances. Hawks are my colony's major threat... Never had a problem with owls or snakes. Starlings are not even a problem. The SREH keep them out 100%... highly recommended to new martineers.

Very perplexing.

Thanks
Dennis
Persistence is not necessarily the key to success, but can be likened to the proverbial sand that brings forth a precious pearl.

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Louise Chambers
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Posts: 6208
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2003 1:07 pm
Location: Corpus Christi, TX

I think hawk or owl - raccoons often leave severed wings below the house. I've seen a hawk at a roost catch martins, eat the head and discard the body - maybe like grizzlies eating just the fatty skin of salmon. The brains must be rich in nutrients. Sorry that happened, Dennis - if you have big hawk problems you might want to add cage guards.
Craig Dyer
Posts: 500
Joined: Fri May 13, 2005 2:24 pm
Location: Nevada, TX
Martin Colony History: Area is rural. Offer 28 compartments...metal housing (Lonestar Goliad) & Supergourds all w/crescent entrance holes. Purple martins are abundant here and eager for quality, well maintained, safe housing. Expect near 100% occupancy this season.

As I recall, the gourd with the headless female had an exterior porch but lacked an interior porch. It also had a crescent entrance hole. I have watched martins sometimes struggle for a second or two when attempting to exit these gourds. That is perhaps what gave the predator the edge and a little extra time to react.
Craig Dyer
Brad-AL
Posts: 566
Joined: Tue Nov 11, 2003 2:00 pm
Location: North AL

Any blood in the cavity? If a bird was killed by decapitation, there should be blood everywhere. Their hearts continue to beat for a while after decapitation.
High quality plastic gourds with porched, tunnelled SREH are Martin magnets.
Craig Dyer
Posts: 500
Joined: Fri May 13, 2005 2:24 pm
Location: Nevada, TX
Martin Colony History: Area is rural. Offer 28 compartments...metal housing (Lonestar Goliad) & Supergourds all w/crescent entrance holes. Purple martins are abundant here and eager for quality, well maintained, safe housing. Expect near 100% occupancy this season.

No, as I remember, none or very little blood. So strange...almost as if the head had been pinched off. Exactly like the picture Dennis posted.
Craig Dyer
Martin man RI
Posts: 441
Joined: Sun Dec 14, 2003 7:04 pm
Location: MA/RI area

When i was living in the city i found a house sparrow the same way.
Head was missing. Kind of odd the bird was in the gourd. And not on
the ground. I cannot even venture a guess. Very strange. ---Ray
Dennis - AL
Posts: 103
Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 8:16 am
Location: Atmore, AL

Louise, I watch all the birds come in to roost every since the scouts have arrived. I have scared off, on three occasions a Coopers hawk. He sits on my property line waiting for the birds to come in to roost. I can guarantee that he is not the culprit.

There was no blood in the gourd Brad. No other destruction to the body of the martin, only the head missing and as though you took a sharp knife and surgically removed it. As Craig stated "the head is pinched off".

The only thing that is going on is struggles for cavities. I have 25- 30 birds coming in to roost. Once again, I am using SREH's and have not seen any breeches this season so the only way for this to occur would be for the martin to stick his head out of the entrance, and a predator to remove it or gain access to the gourd and do the damage. Very strange!

Thanks for all the input. I will continue to watch. I am on vacation this week and will be spending a lot of time working my garden.

Thanks everyone.... Dennis
Persistence is not necessarily the key to success, but can be likened to the proverbial sand that brings forth a precious pearl.

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Dennis - AL
Posts: 103
Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 8:16 am
Location: Atmore, AL

Ray, you are spot on with the headless sparrow. That is exactly how I found the martin. Headless and inside the gourd. The only thing is that a sparrow (hard to believe) or another martin, but I cannot understand another martin doing this type of damage. What would he have done with the head. I searched the gourd and could not find the head.

Dennis
Persistence is not necessarily the key to success, but can be likened to the proverbial sand that brings forth a precious pearl.

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~Ray~Gingerich
Posts: 2122
Joined: Mon Jan 05, 2004 10:24 pm
Location: Delaware/Dover

That sure sounds like an owl to me. I've seen it done to poultry.
I read somewhere that male owls will leave headless rodent's and birds laying around to lure in females. So maybe that's what happened.
~Ray~ Gingerich
1999 1pair, 2006 2 pair, 2008 2 pair,
2009 23 pair, 2010 39 pair, 2011 67 pair,
2012 115 pair, 2013 160 pair,
2014 152 pair, 2015 174 pair, 2016 178 pair
2017 187 pair, 2018 200 pair, 2019 171pair
2020 233 pair
Ted n Ms
Posts: 60
Joined: Fri Jan 25, 2008 8:20 am
Location: West Point, MS

Could be a mink. It will eat the head and lick up every drop of blood.
Dennis - AL
Posts: 103
Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 8:16 am
Location: Atmore, AL

How could the mink or owl access the gourd (SREH) and provide such a clean kill and leave the bird inside the gourd with the access port secure?

Dennis
Persistence is not necessarily the key to success, but can be likened to the proverbial sand that brings forth a precious pearl.

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~Ray~Gingerich
Posts: 2122
Joined: Mon Jan 05, 2004 10:24 pm
Location: Delaware/Dover

Might have grabbed the bird by it's head as it was exiting and then unable to pulll the birds body through your SREH
~Ray~ Gingerich
1999 1pair, 2006 2 pair, 2008 2 pair,
2009 23 pair, 2010 39 pair, 2011 67 pair,
2012 115 pair, 2013 160 pair,
2014 152 pair, 2015 174 pair, 2016 178 pair
2017 187 pair, 2018 200 pair, 2019 171pair
2020 233 pair
Don
Posts: 42
Joined: Tue Apr 06, 2010 10:14 am
Location: MN/Park Rapids

I had all of my tree swallows wiped out a few years ago. Turns out the predator was a flying squirrel. The head was always gone and frequently there was some gnawing at the back muscles.
Ted n Ms
Posts: 60
Joined: Fri Jan 25, 2008 8:20 am
Location: West Point, MS

Dennis - AL wrote:How could the mink or owl access the gourd (SREH) and provide such a clean kill and leave the bird inside the gourd with the access port secure?

Dennis
Dennis an owl can't enter a sreh but a mink can go in a one inch opening. I had one get in my chicken house and kill eleven hens by cutting their throats. A trapper caught him two nights latter.
Last edited by Ted n Ms on Mon Mar 25, 2013 1:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Dennis - AL
Posts: 103
Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 8:16 am
Location: Atmore, AL

Thanks for the information Ted. I have never seen a mink around this area, at least that would get by my Jack Russell Terrier, but their ability to get into a 1" opening would account for the fact the head could be removed and torso of the bird remain inside the gourd. Would the mink only remove the head and leave the torso?

I will read up on mink predation. If anyone can give additional information on mink predation, I would greatly appreciate it.

Thanks everyone.

Dennis
Persistence is not necessarily the key to success, but can be likened to the proverbial sand that brings forth a precious pearl.

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Siberman
Posts: 262
Joined: Thu Mar 18, 2010 1:03 pm
Location: Titus County , TX

You'e be suprised how many 'coons live in town , Dennis .

I'm rural and had one preying on my chickens one year . It would eat the head and maybe take a bite or two out of the upper breast . My Dad seemed to think it might have been a mink but I caught the varmit in the act. ( 'Coon is excellent BBQ , btw . :wink: )

Have any large squirrels around ? I've seen them raid bird nests for eggs and young.
2010: 5 pair - raptor attack .
2011 : nada .
2012 : 1 pair - 5 eggs / 5 fledged .
2013: zero
2014: Lots of visitors
2015 : several visitors . Seriously considering purchasing a drone to scare off raptors .
Dennis - AL
Posts: 103
Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 8:16 am
Location: Atmore, AL

Never seen a coon in the 30+ years I have lived in this house. We used to have squirrels but after 2004 (Hurricane Ivan) we cut all the pine trees in our yard and the Jack Russell Terrier keeps strays out of the yard.

Siberman, do you think a squirrel could get in the SREH entrance?

Dennis
Persistence is not necessarily the key to success, but can be likened to the proverbial sand that brings forth a precious pearl.

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