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Recognizing Purple Martins
The largest of the North American swallows, mature purple martins are fully 7 inches long and weigh up to 2 ounces. Males are uniformly glossy blue-black above and below and they are black-bellied. Females are more brownish-black with a grayish throat and breast areas. Youngsters resemble females until their first molt in their second winter. Martins have the characteristic short necks, short, flat beaks that open very wide and pointed wings of their swallow relatives. They glide in circles, alternating quick wing flaps and gliding. Legs are small and weak because they are not used very often.
Purple martins drink and bathe on the fly, swooping down to the water and skipping along its surface.
A social bunch, martins sit along power lines and jabber, their repertoire of conversational and expressive noises, both soft and sharp fit occasions of fear, anger, sadness and joy. They are comfortable in the presence of people.
The martin makes its nest using twigs, straw, hay and leaves. The incubation period is 12 to 20 days. Natural nest sites are woodpecker holes in tree to crevices in cliffs. Will nest in apartment birdhouses or a grouping of gourds, hollowed out and positioned 15 to 20 feet high in an open area. They raise mostly one brood per year with 4 to 5 eggs but have been known to raise two broods. They nest in the northern portion of their range in May to June, the middle portion of their range in June to July and in the south, April to June. This is one bird where the male takes as active a role in building the nest as does the female. The female incubates the eggs but the male helps raise the young. They mate for the year only. The ultimate in nesting height is 15 feet from the ground.