Wisconsin is on the edge of the breeding range of the Yellow-headed Blackbird. It is a more western bird, and its range stops abruptly at Lake Michigan. Isolated populations in Wisconsin and northeastern Illinois are of conservation concern since populations here have diminished greatly in recent decades. While the core breeding area shows an increasing population trend, Wisconsin and Illinois show steep declines.
Beyond Breeding Bird Survey data, local lore tells a similar story. A barn along I-94 west of Lake Mills used to have a large fading mural of a yellow-headed blackbird, since replaced with species from a global perspective. A pond along Highway 89 used to be called the blackbird pond, since Yellow-headed Blackbirds nested there, but since conifer plantings crowded the edge of the water, blackbirds can’t see the pothole pond’s enticing features.
Research in Illinois suggests that Yellow-headed Blackbirds have an interesting problem: immigration. In their favor, blackbird nests in Illinois and Wisconsin tend to be productive, and Yellow-headed Blackbirds defend their territories from Red-winged Blackbirds quite well. They have high reproductive output and relatively low mortality, so why is the population declining here?