Discover how increasing daylight triggers biological shifts in birds, driving the intense nesting hustle and mating rituals you see every March.

The 'March surge' is a high-stakes race where the prize is a legacy; these birds aren't just reacting to the season, they are predicting it through a complex calculation of light, rain, and heat.
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Lena: You know, I was just looking out my window this morning and noticed the yard is absolutely buzzing. It’s late March, heading into April, and the male birds are everywhere! It feels like they all got a memo to show up at once.
Blythe: They actually did! What you’re seeing is the peak of the spring nesting cycle. For most North American birds, that March to July window is prime time. It’s all triggered by something called photoperiodism—basically, as the days get longer, the increasing light hits a critical level that physically prepares them to breed.
Lena: That’s wild. So the sun is literally changing their biology?
Blythe: Exactly. It triggers hormones that can cause a male bird’s internal organs to swell to over 1,000 times their normal size! They time this perfectly so that when their hungry nestlings arrive, the warmer weather and spring rains have created an abundance of food.
Lena: So that explains the sudden surge in activity. Let’s dive into the specific signs that tell us mating season has officially begun.