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Bird of the Month: Saltmarsh Sparrow

(Article by Pam Hunt. Photos by Grace McCulloch.)

June 11 is “World Saltmarsh Day,” and this presents an excellent opportunity to highlight a species restricted to this habitat, perhaps more so than any other bird on earth. Although there are a handful of sparrows that use salt marshes, the Saltmarsh Sparrow (Ammospiza caudacuta) is arguably the one most deserving of the moniker. For its entire life, this secretive bird is rarely far from tidal marshes dominated by a few types of specialized grasses. They only breed in a narrow band along the coast from southern Maine to Chesapeake Bay and spend the winter in an equally narrow band from New Jersey to Florida. They can even drink salty water (or consume salty prey) without the negative consequences found in closely related species.

During the breeding season, Saltmarsh Sparrows are at the mercy of the tides. They build their nests barely about the high-water mark, which sets them up for the risk of flooding during the exceptionally high tides that come with the full moon. Sometimes nests can survive a short period of inundation, but most fail, and the birds re-nest quite rapidly. At this point, the local population becomes highly synchronized, and the combination of their incubation and nestling periods is just short enough to wrap up before the next extreme high tide. All this occurs in a fairly restricted zone in most marshes: nests too close to the tidal channels risk more extreme flooding, while those near the upland edge are more vulnerable to predation.

This system has served the sparrows well for thousands of years, but in the last few hundred people have acted in multiple ways to make life in the marshes more and more difficult. Early on, we dug ditches to drain marshes for agriculture, or in misguided efforts to control mosquito populations, and today these ditches increase the risk of flooding and can gradually degrade the marsh. Efforts are underway to mitigate these old wounds, but we are now in a dangerous race against rising sea levels caused by climate change. In a system finely tuned to allow successful nesting between monthly “king tides,” any rise in the baseline water level could result in widespread reproductive failure. It should come as no surprise that Saltmarsh Sparrow populations are in steep decline and may disappear from a large portion of their range by the end of the century.

You might not know that NH Audubon owns hundreds of acres of salt marsh along the coast, most in the Hampton-Seabrook Estuary. We protect these areas to conserve the vulnerable Saltmarsh Sparrow and other wildlife.

State of the Birds at a Glance:

  • Habitat: Coastal (salt marshes)
  • Migration: Short-distance
  • Population trend: Strongly declining
  • Threats: Habitat Loss and Fragmentation, Climate Change
  • Conservation actions: Mitigate the effects of sea level rise

More information on “The State of New Hampshire’s Birds” is available here. Full species profiles in the format of “Bird of the Month” are now available here.