Prothonotary Warbler
The Swamp Songster
by Lisa Petit (January 1997)
Bottomland forest on a hot June day. Dark and murky. Quiet except for the buzz of a million mosquitoes and the sounds of occasional splashes and bubbles in the tea-stained water.
Suddenly, a flash of golden-yellow darts across the background of muted greens and browns. The bird lands, throws back its head and
belts forth a sound to make the forest come alive—"Sweet sweet sweet sweet sweet!" Welcome to the swampy realm of the prothonotary warbler.
Once dubbed the “Golden Swamp Warbler” because of its partiality to flooded forests, this striking warbler acquired its current name from 18th century Louisiana Creoles who thought the bird's plumage resembled the golden robes of the protonotarius, a Catholic church official who advised the Pope.
Early ornithologists had classified the warbler in the same genus as the waterthrushes, and later categorized the species as the sole member of its own genus, Protonotaria. The species name, citrea, refers to the lemon color of the bird.
 Nest in natural cavity |
 Nest in gourd |
The prothonotary is unique among the eastern warblers because it nests in holes in trees. Abandoned downy woodpecker holes are the most common nest sites, but the warbler will nest in a variety of natural cavities in dead branches, the broken top of a stump, or the "knee" of a cypress tree.
As with most cavity-nesters, the availability of suitable nesting cavities is the most critical habitat requirement for breeding prothonotaries.
Because of this, the species has been known to choose a whole slew of interesting and strange nesting sites, including the pocket of an old coat, tin cans, and the pulley on an active ferry. Often times the cavity sites chosen are not very well enclosed, and prothonotaries on rare occasions have been found to use abandoned nests of open-nesting species, such as the red-winged blackbird.
Cavity nest-sites are not the only habitat feature required by the species. Prothonotary warblers are rarely ever found far from some body of water, whether it be a slow running river or creek, a large wooded lake, their favorite flooded bottomland forests, or a low spot in the forest that maintains temporary standing water.
Even backyard ponds and swimming pools have attracted prothonotaries occasionally. This special attraction to water may be due to a higher number of decaying trees with nest cavities in flooded areas and the added benefit of lower predation by mammals when the nest-site is located over water.
Insect food for the growing nestlings is also abundant in flooded areas, especially when millions of mayflies emerge and provide the warbler and many other birds with an "all-you-can-eat" buffet. Nesting over water can have its down side, though. Because the warbler usually nests within a few feet of the water's surface, flooding often accounts for substantial nest failure each year.
Also, as poor-flying young fledge from a nest, they run the risk of landing in the water and becoming lunch for a turtle or a large-mouth bass. Luckily, fledgling prothonotary warblers have a nifty ability to swim! Many an ornithologist has observed young prothonotaries zipping across the water to a safe log or other structure.
Prothonotaries spend the nonbreeding season in southern Central America and northern South America
, with their highest numbers in Costa Rica, Panama, and northern Colombia. There the prothonotary inhabits another watery realm, mangrove swamps. In the mangroves of Panama, the warbler can reach such high population density that early ornithologists described "swarms" of prothonotary warblers.
In contrast to their aggressive territoriality during the breeding season, wintering prothonotaries exhibit almost no aggression against each other as they forage in large groups for insects and small snails among the aerial roots of the mangrove trees. Male and female prothonotaries apparently sometimes maintain their pair-bond on the wintering grounds.
Data from the North American Breeding Bird Survey show that prothonotary warblers have declined overall at a rate of 1.5% annually since 1966. Steeper declines are evident in some regions where the bird reaches its highest abundances, such as in the lower Mississippi Valley.
Because of the warbler's very specific habitat requirements, threats to breeding and wintering populations take the form of wetland losses to logging and development in both the bottomland forests of North America and the mangrove swamps of Central and South America.
Birdwatchers don't often get a chance to see this beautiful golden swamp warbler unless they are in the appropriate habitat, making the sight of a prothonotary a memorable experience.
In fact, the sight of a prothonotary warbler along the Potomac River once made a birdwatcher named Alger Hiss so excited that he told a friend about his experience.
Unfortunately, the fact that Whittaker Chambers knew about the prothonotary sighting was one of the links that a freshman congressman named Richard Nixon used to prove that the two men knew each other, leading to the conviction of Hiss (a suspected spy) on a perjury charge. You might say that Nixon had the prothonotary warbler to thank for his subsequent rise to the Presidency!
Song recorded by John R. Sauer, USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center
More about the Prothonotary Warbler
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Comments (36):
- I saw a prothonotary warbler in my back yard in Arecibo, Puerto Rico on October, 2007.
10/7/2007
- I have a pair of Prothonotary warblers that has nested on my patio in a bird house during the summers of 2006 and 2007. However the birds have a white stripe on the belly, the rest of the bird is identified as a prothonotary warbler. Can anybody give a reason for the white stripe?
I live in Mannford, OK., a suburb of Tulsa.
12/15/2007
- Good Job :)
2/18/2008
- i think this is a very detailed story. and the reason for the white stripe is to tell the gender of the warbeler
2/28/2008
- I have one building a nest in a bird house on my deck right now 4/28/2008. Do they build mock nest like wrens or is this the real deal?
4/29/2008
- I have a nest with 5 or 6 hatchlings in the lid catcher cavity of a stainless steel cooler which is under our house (on 8' pilings). I discovered the nest when there were only 4 eggs inside. She had 6 eggs total in the end, and I think they have all hatched. It's amazing to watch her feed them with me sitting so close by. We live in Butte La Rose, Louisiana. 05/04/08
5/4/2008
- In response to the 4/29 comment: Males build mock nests; females build the real nest.
I have seen these every year for the past 20 years. I go to Kentucky Lake (a section of it where the Big Sandy River feeds into Kentucky Lake, near Paris, Tennessee) to fish for a couple of weeks every spring, and have always loved them... but until recently, I'd never bothered to figure out what they were. We wade-fish, standing in 2-3 feet of water fishing buck bushes, and I'd never brought a camera out into waist-deep water with me until this year. I managed to take a bunch of pictures of them, and some searching on the net helped me ID the bird. We've always called them "crappie birds," because we fish for crappie and whenever one of them lands on a bush, I like to fish that bush because I think it's good luck -- and it was this year.
Anyway, just thought I'd answer the nest question.
~Matt
email: taffastrophe@yahoo.com
5/10/2008
- A pair nests almost every year in a decorative white ceramic birdhouse that hangs in our flowerbed. This spring I replaced it with a real bird house and hung the old one as an afterthought under the eves on the other side of our house. They nested in the old one! Don't know what attracts them to it. This is not a swampy area, though until last year there was some standing water in the woods nearby where an old pond had washed out. We observed the youngsters leave their nest today - one couldn't fly well so I'm not sure of his prospects, but the others did amazingly well. Lee in Vicksburg, MS.
5/25/2008
- Ilive on a small lake in East Texas. Last year I saw only the male. This year a nest was built in a bluebird nesting box in my back yard. I have kept my cat in garage for two weeks because he was monitering the box. I checked and there were eggs. There were four bbabies that I took a picture of this week. They fledged over the weekend. The nest still had one unhatched egg and one broken egg. The babies were dark golden with bluish beaks and tails. Beautiful June 2, 2008
6/2/2008
- We live in DeSoto Co, MS and have a pair nesting in a blue bird house that the lake overtook with high water.
Not nowing what the bird was, I am releaved to know that the young can tread water!
6/15/2008
- 7/13/08 For the first time ever, we have two pairs of Prothonotary warblers nesting in blue bird houses at our cottage on Kentucky Lake (near Paris, TN.) I had never seen this type of bird before and thought they were very much like yellow/orange - blue birds. Same size, same flying style. Because we're at the cottage only on weekends, at first the birds seemed very nervous about having us near their nesting places. However, after a few days they were flying over, around, and past us to feed their babies.
Not only are they absolutely beautiful birds and fabulous singers, they are great parents. I also noticed that they are also very clean and remove wastes from the nesting house just like blue birds do. I'm a little concerned,however, because the warblers are nesting in our beloved blue birds' space. I hope this isn't a situation where you can only have one type of birds or the other. Even though we had one brood of blue birds in the houses this year, we haven't seen the blues since the warblers arrived on the scene.
I know this is a clear case of wanting to have my cake and eat it too! I want to keep them both! Can they co-exist with the blue birds? Do we need to put up more houses? Our lot at the lake is not huge. Is a 100' X 150' lot big enough for both groups without causing bird wars?
7/13/2008
- Hello. I'm from Colombia, specifically the northern coast of Colombia and for many years (since my childhood) I have seen arriving since late August at Prothonotary the courtyard of my parental home. They come to sleep in some trees in the backyard. I have counted more than 150 individuals gathered. This is common to happen in some trees in the town where I live, which is not in the middle of the water, it is more, there is no water in several miles around. I started a small project to protect this and other populations of this species in my town. As they are hunted by children and can felling trees where they have stayed for generations. To support this need, if you know any person or entity to assist with the implementation of the project are welcome.
Yeiner Molina.
Biologist.
ORNIAT.
avesyemo@hotmail.com
10/1/2008
- There was a Prothonotary Warbler roost in Gamboa, Panama. I know Gene Morton has reported on group roosting in this species in mangroves on the Pacific side of Panama.
10/1/2008
- good
11/6/2008
- It was cind of good
1/21/2009
- very good
1/21/2009
- very good
1/21/2009
- I've just learned of the Prothonotary Warbler and am setting out some interesting nesting opportunities around the area. I live near the Mississippi River and have many damp bottoms to help out these lovely little critters. I'll let all know if I have success.
3/12/2009
- I think I saw 2 of these birds this morning here in East Texas. The birds I saw were bright yellow with black wings. Both of them were the same color.
4/4/2009
- I live on an upper arm of Lake Hudson in NE Oklahoma. There are many trees around my property. We are on a bluff about 25 feet above the water. I have 2 houses at the edge of the trees close to the water. There have been warblers nesting in one and sometimes both of the houses for the last 12 years, sometimes raising 2 families on occasion 3. I am wondering if these are the same family of birds returning each year? One family is due to hatch in about 2 days. We have bird baths that they use frequently. Also many feeders that feed many different beautiful birds. sheila1940@gmail.com
5/16/2009
- Ponchatoula, Louisiana. We have had a goldfish pond for 5 years now. I think it has attracted them to our yard. There are two bird houses at the pond. Today the female was checking them both out. We see and here her singing everyday. May 2009
5/16/2009
- Pearl River, LA May 30, 2009 Oh, what a thrill to see a prothonary warbler check out a birdhouse in the backyard this afternoon, close to my small goldfish pond and the kids 10 foot swimming pool (enclosed in a mosquito tent.)
5/30/2009
- June 04, 2009 Hwy 101 near Newport, NC My wife and I have spent a small fortune on bird housing in our back yard as well as lots of labor trying to attract our "Pro Boy" into remaining with us on it's yearly visit to our back yard. We have documented his presence each of the past three years. This year I attached a gourd to the back side of our small shed and within a few days of doing so we observed the male and female continuously going in and out of the gourd. Several days later (not sure of the exact time) we learn their are a pair of babies in the nest. I did get a picture of one of the babies near the one inch hole I had made in the gourd. Unsure of what was happening we researched something we found odd.... each time the parent would take food to the nest he or she was flying away with something in it's beak. We have learned that the prothonary warbler keeps a very clean nest by removing the baby bird droppings each time it feeds one. Beautiful bird, I have been fortunate to get video as well as still photographs. The babies have left the nest and have not as of this writing been seen. We are assuming the parents are training them to live in the wild in the wet areas near our home. The male does return several times each day to our running water fountain for a drink and bath.
6/4/2009
- I live near Iowa City, IA and I am sure I saw a prothonotary warbler in my front yard today. It was the only bird I could find in my birding book that looked like it. I don't live near a swamp but there is a creek nearby and it has rained quite a bit this spring. It was the first time I have seen one around here.
6/8/2009
- I spotted a male in the back yard May 2009 in Amite, LA. I haven't seen it in June, but I hear it and a couple others in the woods behind the house every day.
6/9/2009
- This morning we spotted this bird and had to look it up to see what it was. We have never seen it before. It was most definitely the prothonotary Warbler. It was sitting on our bird station looking like it was lost. We had a wide variety of food out to attract birds, but it didn't seem interested in the feeders at all. We live near the Pocomoke River in Pocomoke City, MD. There are many cypress swamps around the river. I read that the cowbird will parasite the nests of the warbler. And we have also seen these birds for the first time this year. They are a nusiance because the males like to sit on the window ledge and tap on the window. At 6 am it sounds like a machine gun! I hope to more of the prothonotary warbler and less of the cowbird!!! 06/11/2009
6/11/2009
- i was thrilled to learn more of this darling bird which i have come to know just this spring. It sings almost incessantly in my garden/yard in natchez, ms where we live about a half mile from the ms river, and have one bird bath and three "turtle" baths for box turtles. it/they stay in the thickets of our certified backyard wildlife habitat and i have not fouond their nest, but now know to look for a cavity. 06/11/2009
6/11/2009
- I'm so glad I came across your article. We had a pair nest and raise their babies in a hanging birdhouse on our riverbank in N. Fla. this spring. With much patience. I got quite a few good pictures of the male coming and going. The female was much more elusive.
6/29/2009
- I have a pair that have come the last two springs to our cabin at Tunica Lake, MS. The first year, they built their nest in a decorative bird house and raised their young successfully. This year we created some decorative gourd nests, and almost immediately they came to the largest blue gourd. Not long after the eggs hatched, they were abandoned and the pair went back to the decorative bird house and started over. We witnessed the last baby leave and they have remained indefinitely, much to our delight.
7/31/2009
- I had previously seen this species only during migrations at Port Aransas, Texas; but now have a report that at least one and perhaps a pair have been seen by the pond behind our church in Arlington, Texas, which has an acre of brushy woods adjacent and a larger pond just 100 yards away in a neighboring park.
8/3/2009
- I am new to birding and visited Magee Marsh on the northern shores of Ohio (Oak Harbor) on 08/24/09. Verified the bird we saw with the warbler display at the boardwalk entrance and my new field guide for birds of North America. Absolutely beautiful. The many mosquito bites were worth the 3 1/2 hours in the marsh.
8/26/2009
- Very helpful--thanks!
Had my first-ever prothonotary sighting yesterday, in my own wooded backyard in the Atlanta suburbs. Maybe the poor thing was confused by all the flooding we have had this week.
9/24/2009
- Does any one have a plan for a warbler house
10/14/2009
- I have seen this species in the woods behind my ponds over a small creek here in Blackshear Ga. (south east Ga.) and am putting out houses for them soon for next years nesters. I never see deer from my deer stand but these little guys seem to be all around so I thought I would help them out by giving them a few wood houses and a few gourd houses to try out for spring.
11/4/2009
- great but alittle long can we have a list of predaors
1/13/2010
- How territorial are they? In other words how close should the nest be placed?
1/14/2010
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