Red-cockaded woodpecker

Red-cockaded woodpecker
Female red-cockaded woodpecker
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Piciformes
Family: Picidae
Genus: Leuconotopicus
Species: L. borealis
Binomial name
Leuconotopicus borealis
Vieillot, 1809
Synonyms

Picoides borealis Vieillot, 1809

The red-cockaded woodpecker (Leuconotopicus borealis) is a woodpecker found in southeastern North America. Some taxonomic authorities, including the American Ornithological Society, continue to place this species in the genus Picoides.

Description

Detail of head

The red-cockaded woodpecker is small to mid-sized species, being intermediate in size between North America's two most widespread woodpeckers (the downy and hairy woodpeckers). This species measures 18–23 cm (7.1–9.1 in) in length, spans 34–41 cm (13–16 in) across the wings and weighs 40–56 g (1.4–2.0 oz).[2][3][4] Among the standard measurements, the wing chord is 9.5–12.6 cm (3.7–5.0 in), the tail is 7–8.2 cm (2.8–3.2 in), the bill is 1.9–2.3 cm (0.75–0.91 in) and the tarsus is 1.8–2.2 cm (0.71–0.87 in).[5] Its back is barred with black and white horizontal stripes. The red-cockaded woodpecker's most distinguishing feature is a black cap and nape that encircle large white cheek patches. Rarely visible, except perhaps during the breeding season and periods of territorial defense, the male has a small red streak on each side of its black cap called a cockade, hence its name. The species is listed as Near Threatened by the IUCN.

Behavior

The red-cockaded woodpecker feeds primarily on ants, beetles, cockroaches, caterpillars, wood-boring insects, and spiders, and occasionally fruit and berries.

Red-cockaded woodpeckers are a territorial, nonmigratory, cooperative breeding species, frequently having the same mate for several years.The nesting season runs from April to June. The breeding female lays three to four eggs in the breeding male's roost cavity. Group members incubate the small white eggs for 10–13 days. Once hatched, the nestlings remain in the nest cavity for about 26–29 days. Upon fledging, the young often remain with the parents, forming groups of up to nine or more members, but more typically three to four members. There is only one pair of breeding birds within each group, and they normally only raise a single brood each year. The other group members, called helpers, usually males from the previous breeding season, help incubate the eggs and raise the young. Juvenile females generally leave the group before the next breeding season, in search of solitary male groups. The main predators of red-cockaded nests are rat snakes, although corn snakes also represent a threat.[6][6]

Distribution and habitat

Historically, this woodpecker's range extended in the southeastern United States from Florida to New Jersey and Maryland, as far west as eastern Texas and Oklahoma, and inland to Missouri, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Today it is estimated that there are about 5,000 groups of red-cockaded woodpeckers, or 12,500 birds, from Florida to Virginia and west to southeast Oklahoma and eastern Texas, representing about 1% of the woodpecker's original population. They have become locally extinct (extirpated) in Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, New Jersey, and Tennessee.[7]

Male at nest cavity in Longleaf Pine

The red-cockaded woodpecker makes its home in fire-dependent pine savannas.[7] Longleaf pines (Pinus palustris) are most commonly preferred, but other species of southern pine are also acceptable. While other woodpeckers bore out cavities in dead trees where the wood is rotten and soft, the red-cockaded woodpecker is the only one which excavates cavities exclusively in living pine trees. The older pines favored by the red-cockaded woodpecker often suffer from a fungus called red heart rot which attacks the center of the trunk, causing the inner wood, the heartwood, to become soft. Cavities generally take from 1 to 3 years to excavate.

The aggregate of cavity trees is called a cluster and may include 1 to 20 or more cavity trees on 3 to 60 acres (12,000 to 240,000 m²). The average cluster is about 10 acres (40,000 m²). Cavity trees that are being actively used have numerous, small resin wells which exude sap. The birds keep the sap flowing apparently as a cavity defense mechanism against rat snakes and possibly other predators. The typical territory for a group ranges from about 125 to 200 acres (500,000 to 800,000 m²), but observers have reported territories running from a low of around 60 acres (240,000 m²), to an upper extreme of more than 600 acres (2.40 km²). The size of a particular territory is related to both habitat suitability and population density.

The red-cockaded woodpecker plays a vital role in the intricate web of life of the southern pine forests. A number of other birds and small mammals use the cavities excavated by red-cockaded woodpeckers, such as chickadees, bluebirds, titmice, and several other woodpecker species, including the downy, Hairy, and red-bellied woodpeckers. Larger woodpeckers such as northern flicker, red-bellied or pileated woodpecker may take over a red-cockaded woodpecker cavity, sometimes enlarging the hole enough to allow eastern screech owls, wood ducks, and even raccoons to move in later. Flying squirrels, several species of reptiles and amphibians, and insects, primarily bees and wasps, also will use red-cockaded woodpecker cavities.

Conservation

The red-cockaded woodpecker has been the focus of conservation efforts even before the passing of the Endangered Species Act in 1970. In Florida, pairs are being released at DuPuis Management Area.

Due to the high importance of nesting habitat on the woodpecker's reproduction, much management has been dedicated to create ideal and more numerous nesting sites. Nesting clusters have been spared from forestry activity to preserve old-growth, large diameter trees. The nesting sites themselves have also been managed to make them more appealing. The use of controlled burning has been used to reduce deciduous growth around nesting colonies. The red-cockaded woodpecker has been shown to prefer nesting sites with less deciduous growth. The use of controlled burning must be exercised with caution due to the highly flammable resin barriers formed by the woodpecker.[8]

In an effort to increase the red-cockaded woodpecker population, states such as Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, and Georgia's wildlife management are creating artificial cavities in Longleaf Pine trees. There are two methods in which wildlife management officers use to insert cavities in long leaf pines. The most respected and latest approach is to carve out a nesting cavity in the tree and insert a man-made nest. The older and less used approach is to drill a cavity into the tree in hopes that the birds will settle there and nest.[9]

Due to the energetically expensive process of excavating new cavities, more energy is expended competing for existing home ranges rather than colonizing new areas. Red-cockaded woodpeckers will make use of artificial cavities and even recolonize abandoned ranges when cavities are created.[10]

In addition to the creation of new cavities, methods for protecting existing cavities are also used. The most common technique employed is a restrictor plate. The plate prevents other species from enlarging or changing the shape of the cavity entrance. These restrictor plates must be carefully monitored, however, to ensure that no hindrance is given to the woodpecker. Adjustments must also be made as the tree grows.[11]

Results from the Endangered Species Act

Although listed under the Endangered Species Act as an endangered species, the lack of concern regarding economic results and incentives resulting from the act has made federal listing more of a threat to the Red-Cockaded Woodpecker than it has helped to conserve it. A vast majority of endangered species are located on private lands [12]. Such locations with the presence of an endangered, or threatened, species are under the control of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service biologists[13]. Private landowners are prohibited from modifying habitats or taking such animals in any way, which puts the economic costs versus economic benefits of species conservation to the test [12]. Most private landowners find their economic costs outweighing the benefits of conserving the species. The Endangered Species Act tries to prevent economic concerns from being put above species conservation[14], but some private landowners have gone through loopholes to ensure their economic benefit and maintain control of their land.

The Red-Cockaded Woodpecker was affected in such a way that their location on private property in some southeastern states, such as North Carolina and Texas, was being hindered dramatically. It became common for private landowners, specifically in Eastern Texas, to begin cutting down the long-leaf pine trees so that the woodpeckers would not nest in their trees[14][15]. By eliminating the trees on a piece of privately owned land, the land owners no longer have to abide by the requirements of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologists. These biologists have no incentive to limit their conservation demands, so this adds a driving factor for the private landowners to eliminate habitable trees. Without an available habitat for the endangered species to live in, the landowners are still able to benefit economically from any profit the trees give them, as well as maintaining construction rights on their own land[13]

The Red-Cockaded Woodpecker also suffers from habitat fragmentation when landowners remove habitable pines. When a larger cluster of birds gets split up, it is difficult for the young to find mates and eventually becomes an issue regarding species dispersal[15]. While migrating in search of new places to settle, the Red-Cockaded Woodpecker is forced to take alternate travel routes, encountering habitats of competing woodpecker species. A significant competitor is the Pileated Woodpecker, who is known for doubling the width of cavities in trees, making the tree as a whole uninhabitable to the Red-Cockaded Woodpecker[16]. This competition adds to the threat of extinction of the Red-Cockaded Woodpeckers species.

With economic concern and results lacking attention under the Endangered Species Act, the Red-Cockaded Woodpecker is being pushed to the brink of extinction, and other species who benefit from this keystone species are also being threatened. Abandoned cavities created by the Red-Cockaded Woodpecker are homes to secondary cavity dwellers such as snakes, squirrels, and frogs[17].


See also

References

  1. BirdLife International (2016). "Leuconotopicus borealis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2016.3. International Union for Conservation of Nature. Retrieved 1 April 2017.
  2. fact-sheets.com
  3. All About Birds
  4. Animal Diversity Web
  5. Woodpeckers: An Identification Guide to the Woodpeckers of the World by Hans Winkler, David A. Christie & David Nurney. Houghton Mifflin (1995), ISBN 978-0395720431
  6. 1 2 Longleaf Alliance
  7. 1 2 U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Red-cockaded Woodpecker
  8. Richard N. Conner; Brian A. Locke (Winter 1979). "Effects of a Prescribed Burn on Cavity Trees of Red-Cockaded Woodpeckers". Wildlife Society Bulletin. 7: 291–293. JSTOR 3781867.
  9. Georgia Public Broadcasting: Georgia Outdoors. "The Red Hills of Georgia (transcript, p. 6)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-28. Retrieved 2007-05-14.
  10. Carole K. Copeyon; Jeffrey R. Walters; J. H. Carter III (Oct 1991). "Induction of Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Group Formation by Artificial Cavity Construction". The Journal of Wildlife Management. 55: 549–556. JSTOR 3809497. doi:10.2307/3809497.
  11. J.H. Carter, III; Jeffrey R. Walters; Steven H. Everhart; Phillip D. Doerr (Spring 1989). "Restrictors for Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Cavities". Wildlife Society Bulletin. 17: 68–72. JSTOR 3782042.
  12. 1 2 Brown Jr., Garnder M.; Shogren, Jason F. (1998). "Economics of the Endangered Species Act". The Journal of Economic Perspectives. 12. American Economic Association. pp. 3–20.
  13. 1 2 Stroup, Richard. "The Endangered Species Act: Making Innocent Species the Enemy (Full)". Property and Environment Research Center. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  14. 1 2 Burnett, H. Sterling (June 28, 2017). "Endangered Species Act Doesn't Save Species". The American Spectator. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  15. 1 2 Conner, Richard N.; Rudolph, Craig D. (1991). "Forest Habitat Loss, Fragmentation, and Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Populations". The Wilson Bulletin. Wilson Ornithological Society. pp. 446–457.
  16. Saenz, Daniel; Conner, Richard N.; Shackelford, Clifford E.; Rudolph, Craig D. (1998). The Wilson Bulletin. Wilson Ornithological Society. pp. 362–367.
  17. "The Safe Harbor Program for Red-cockaded Woodpeckers in North Carolina" (PDF). U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Further reading

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