A New Frontier for Purple Martin Conservation in Northwest Connecticut

New tracking technology will allow researchers to study martin movements across the country鈥攁nd outside of it!
Allyson Thompson leans over slightly, arms held out in front of her as she gently releases a newly tagged Purple Martin back towards the nesting structure it came from.

Across the northeastern United States, Purple Martins are an increasingly rare sight. For the past 50 years, their population numbers have been on a steady decline, but there is an exception to this rule: the northwest corner of Connecticut. Unlike in other parts of the country, sustained conservation and monitoring efforts have shown that martins in this region are growing in population. 

Now, conservationists are ready to bring this work from a local scale to a global one.

After all, studying birds where they nest and breed only reveals half their story. Like many migratory birds, Purple Martins spend half of their year outside of the United States. Research has indicated that they overwinter somewhere in the Amazon Basin, but figuring out exactly where is essential to the conservation of the species.

鈥淲e say a lot about the importance of protecting birds throughout their entire annual cycle, but that can be an abstract concept if you can鈥檛 picture the whole cycle,鈥 says Eileen Fielding, director of the Sharon 探花精选 Center. 

Several years ago, the Center accepted an offer to enter into a collaboration with Marvelwood School and the Kent Land Trust, who have been working for over a decade to restore inland Purple Martin populations, in conjunction with the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection and the Purple Martin Conservation Association. It was the hard work of these partners that grew one colony鈥攍ocated on the Center's Miles 探花精选 Sanctuary鈥攆rom four breeding pairs to thirty, a massive feat indeed.

This has set the stage to make use of new tracking technologies and bring us closer to completing that 鈥渨hole cycle鈥 picture.

High Tech and High-Flying

In June, ten Purple Martins from the colony at Miles 探花精选 Sanctuary were captured and fitted with either a GPS data logger or a nanotag. This brings the total of birds fitted with tracking devices in the northwest corner to a very exciting forty, split evenly between the GPS data loggers and the nanotags.

Each tracking device comes with its own strengths and weaknesses, so utilizing both can paint a clearer picture. While the GPS tags record precise location data, a bird wearing one must be recaptured for its data to be collected, which is not always possible. 

Birds with nanotags do not have to be recaptured for their data to be collected, but they do need to fly within a certain radius of a Motus station鈥攚hose antennae pick up radio signals emitted by nanotags鈥攆or any data to be produced. Though the Motus network is continually growing鈥攊ncluding a 鈥攊t still has gaps that might allow for data to be lost.

Even so, some of these tagged birds are already providing more insight into their movements, pinging many of the local towers in addition to other across Connecticut and as far south as Maryland. 

New Data Leads to New Solutions

鈥淭he nanotags and archival GPS data loggers will help us fill in the knowledge gaps about the movements of purple martins so that we can identify key breeding, roosting, migratory pathways and wintering sites,鈥 says Laurie Doss, master bander and board member of the Purple Martin Conservation Association (PMCA). 鈥淭he data collected via the GPS data loggers will also provide critical information to the [PMCA] and its partners in Brazil in their search for remote Amazon locations to study wintering martins.鈥

Doss has worked alongside many private and community partners for the past 17 years to band and research these birds and help maintain Connecticut's status as 鈥渢he last stronghold for martin populations in the New England Region.鈥 

The data collected will not only help answer these questions, but also create stories of individual birds that are valuable conservation tools in and of themselves. 鈥淧eople love a story,鈥 explains Doss. 鈥淏eing able to share the journey of individual martins helps to increase public excitement for the plight of this species, and builds global connections to conserve Purple Martins.鈥

Creating Opportunities for Early-Career Conservationists

Some lucky people even get to become part of this story. Much of this conservation work has also been used as an opportunity to involve young and early-career conservationists, including this exciting tracking project. Interns from the Kent Land Trust and the Sharon 探花精选 Center, along with students from the Marvelwood School, where more Purple Martin work takes place, assisted Laurie Doss and Joe Siegrist, president of the PMCA, with this project.

Allyson Thompson is another such participant. An undergrad at Northern Illinois University, she spent eight weeks as an intern at the Sharon 探花精选 Center this summer, thanks to support from the Yale Conservation Scholars program. The hands-on field work and conservation experience she gained has impacted not only her career, but also her feelings towards the field itself.

鈥淓nvironmental science can be a heavy field of study,鈥 she says. 鈥淲atching conservation in action at 探花精选 is extremely refreshing and provides a silver lining in what could be a very grey cloud.鈥

Just as these up-and-coming conservationists are the future of this field, so are these new and exciting tracking methods part of the future of conservation. With the help of these tags and the little birds that carry them, we鈥檒l know more about Purple Martin migration habits come fall and spring, and be one step closer to stabilizing their populations in Connecticut and elsewhere in the Eastern United States.

This cutting edge research in northwestern Connecticut was made possible via a generous grant from the Jeniam Foundation to the Purple Martin Conservation Association.

All banding, marking, and sampling is being conducted under a federally authorized Bird Banding Permit issued by the U.S. Geological Survey and a State Permit authorized by the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection.