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  • Hey!

  • This weird thing is actually a piece of prime real estate.

  • With just a few modifications,

  • it will become a nice summer home for

  • this couple and their children.

  • These are purple martins.

  • They're native North American songbirds

  • but here's the thing: on the East Coast they don't nest in the natural world anymore;

  • They only breed in man-made birdhouses

  • which is weird, and made me wonder, "How is this even possible?"

  • It turns out there's this vast network of strangely devoted purple martin landlords.

  • "Purple martins are totally dependent on man for housing now."

  • "Oh, dear ... he LOVES purple martins."

  • Jim grows gourds himself.

  • He's got this whole purple martin colony in his backyard.

  • To make room for it he waited for his wife to go to work

  • and then cut down two of her dog wood trees.

  • "Much to her displeasure."

  • "He'll go I don't know how far with anything to make those birds happy."

  • And he's not alone.

  • I met Jim's whole purple Martin crew and they're all just as obsessed with these birds.

  • "I'm really in love with 'em if you want to just tell it like it is."

  • "We look forward to 'em coming. 'The martins are going to be here in two weeks!'

  • "Y'know you start that up."

  • Apparently, these little birds are the first to arrive every year

  • They fly up from their winter range in South America traveling a whopping 300 miles per day

  • When they arrive in the states they start scoping out birdhouses

  • They used to nest in tree snags and rocky crevices

  • but then, thousands of years ago,

  • Native Americans started putting up gourds for the martins

  • and now on the East Coast the birds only breed

  • and raise their chicks in human built housing

  • The real finale of purple martin season comes in late summer

  • when the birds gather in enormous flocks before they migrate back south

  • For the past 25 years, the largest of these roosts

  • has been in the middle of a lake in South Carolina on a tiny island.

  • Hundreds of thousands of birds show up

  • at least half a million

  • and I thought, "That's something I would really like to see."

  • So I packed my lunch

  • and I gave my boss the slip

  • Wrote my self this theme song

  • Going on a field trip - yeah! ♫

  • It took me eight hours to drive down to South Carolina

  • but I just kept imagining the amazing spectacle that was waiting for me there

  • So I made it down to Lake Murray,

  • hired this guy to take me out on the water,

  • and at long last reached the island

  • where purple martins have roosted for the past 25 years.

  • But the birds weren't there.

  • How did half a million birds go missing?

  • And was foul play involved?

  • After all, purple martins have been in trouble for a long time

  • and it all started with a play written by William Shakespeare.

  • Stay with me!

  • In Henry IV, Part 1, a character named Hotspur

  • mentions a starling.

  • And centuries later, Eugene Schieffelin (this New York drug manufacturer)

  • had the whimsical idea to bring every bird

  • mentioned by Shakespeare to the United States.

  • This was 1890.

  • No one really knew about invasive species.

  • So when Schieffelin released a hundred European starlings in Central Park

  • everyone was pretty pleased.

  • In the last century though,

  • Those hundred birds have turned into an army of 200 million.

  • And they are the worst! They're bullies!

  • They'll violently compete for those natural cavities where purple martins used to nest

  • so even if the martins wanted to return to nature -- they couldn't

  • And they'll even invade martin houses,

  • pecking eggs with their sharp beaks,

  • smothering babies and killing adults

  • And there are other predators to worry about too.

  • Owls.

  • Snake.

  • Hawks.

  • Raccoon.

  • And another invasive species:

  • the European house sparrow.

  • So purple martins have come to rely on their human landlords to protect them.

  • The landlords have cages to keep away owls,

  • electrified poles to keep away snakes,

  • traps to catch starlings ...

  • but was all that working?

  • When half a million birds failed to show up at Lake Murray

  • it got me worried: had the predators killed them off?

  • Or had they just relocated?

  • I really wanted to find them or at least figure out what happened

  • so I asked Julie for help.

  • We turned to weather radar for clues

  • and there they were!

  • The birds were still in South Carolina.

  • "And see that's huge."

  • Those expanding rings are purple martins.

  • Their flocks are so dense they show up on radar

  • when they leave their roosts in the morning

  • "Yeah - we need to go there!"

  • The radar images weren't too precise

  • but it looked like the martins might have relocated up to Lake Monticello

  • where I might finally get to see a roost.

  • "I already see one island that looks hopeful."

  • "But I think there's like a couple of different little islands out here."

  • "I wouldn't think it's that one. If any one it's this one."

  • "And it looks like -- is there a tent on the beach."

  • "I see people - they're sitting in their chairs."

  • "They'll probably go purple WHAT?"

  • "They'll probably think it's that street drug."

  • "We're looking looking for purple martin - ya heard of it?"

  • "Have y'all seen the purple martins out here?"

  • "There's somewhere on this lake. There's a bunch of small little birds."

  • "You didn't see him last night?"

  • The birds tend to gather before sunset

  • so we expected to start seeing the early arrivals any minute.

  • "Here birdie, birdie, birdie."

  • That's my worried face.

  • The sun was setting, we'd been exploring the lake for more than an hour,

  • and we still hadn't seen a sign of the roost.

  • "I see nothing!"

  • "That one looks like it's moving like a purple martin."

  • "That looks like purple martin!"

  • "And they are going that way."

  • "Alright I'm starting to see more."

  • "Look over those trees, Julie."

  • "Look at the water." "Oh!"

  • "I mean not just over the water but they're all up in there."

  • "We'll just have to see where they go ..."

  • "If we wanted to find the roost,

  • we needed to get there before dark.

  • "Your dream might come true, Adam."

  • Adam: "Well, we'll see."

  • "Julie, they're flying dead ahead of us whatever's up there."

  • "Well..."

  • "What is - what does that island look like?"

  • "Oh my god!"

  • "Is it there?"

  • "Go that way!"

  • It's still a mystery why the purple martins left Lake Murray

  • or how they all managed to gather at this new roost site.

  • Look at all those birds!

  • Every single one was born in a house that human built

  • We've created a world that is so hostile to purple martins

  • and now a species that we don't fully understand

  • relies on us for survival

  • Glide on the air

  • You swivel and turn

  • Fast beating heart

  • What do I gotta learn? ♫

  • Oh, swallow

  • What did you swallow? ♫

  • You swoop so low

  • You come and you go

  • "Goodnight, purple martins."

  • you

Hey!

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