November/December 1987
By the Mother Earth News editors
Issue # 108 - November/December 1987
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The purple martin has lived under human management longer than any other wild North American bird. Even before Europeans arrived, Native Americans enticed these amiable fliers to nest in their villages by suspending hollowed gourds from the support poles of their wigwams. This form of housing assistance has continued over the years, though the single-family gourd has been widely replaced by elaborate wood, plastic or aluminum dwellings, most of them multi-compartmented like Victorian hotels or Miami Beach condos.
But hard times have hit, and this highly human-dependent species is suffering longterm declines across significant portions of its breeding range. The problem could be either competition for nest sites from such nonnatives as the starling or English house sparrow, increased predation by owls and raccoons, the ubiquity of pesticides, a disease epidemic, or changes in habitat or climate. On the other hand, it could be the result of a housing shortage. Evidently, fewer of us are erecting adequate martin quarters and properly maintaining them.
To find out what's wrong, the Purple Martin Conservation Association has been formed to help coordinate the management efforts of all martin landlords. Through its Colony Registry Program, it seeks to locate and register most of the martin colonies in North America. In other words, members of the association are mounting a house-to-house census—martin house, that is.
If you know of someone who supports a martin colony (in gourds, a condo or what have you) or someone trying to attract one, or if you are interested in starting a colony yourself, they ask you to write. You can further assist martins everywhere, they add, by looking for martin dwellings in people's yards around your community or during your travels. If you locate some, try to obtain mailing addresses (of the landlords!) from street or house numbers, rural mailboxes, phone books, or by stopping to inquire. Send your data to Purple Martin Conservation Association, Edinboro University, Edinboro, PA 16444.
Lead Danish
In Denmark, the major cause of lead pollution is not auto exhaust (the culorit in most industrial nations) but shotgun pellets. In fact, spent shotgun ammo accounts for more than three times the amount of lead deposited in the environment by Danish vehicles; 800 tons of lead shot are rained on Denmark each year. Worse yet, scientists have found that the toxic pellets are "rapidly transformed" into substances that can be ingested by plants and animals or leached into water systems. In the United States, only steel shot is allowed in some regions—particularly in heavily hunted waterfowl territory—but, by and large, lead shot is still legal, and, though steel is gaining greater acceptance, the heavier lead pellets are still preferred by most hunters.