Saturday, January 23, 2010

The winter forest can seem very empty compared to its spring and summer counterparts. I have to look harder to appreciate it. The forest does not ring with song, but find a winter flock and the trees seem full of chirping and foraging chickadees. Male goldfinches have donned duller plumages, but cardinals are paint drops scattered in the snowy landscape.

In the relative quiet, it’s not unusual to hear the tapping of a foraging woodpecker or the repeated kuk of a pileated woodpecker which, thanks to creative use of the sound in jungle movies, puts one in mind of a much more steamy setting rather than a forest of naked trees under-layered by snow softening in a winter sun. I’ve been seeing these birds around lately. I often think that a blue jay is crossing the pond at work, then notice that the black and white wing pattern is more striking and the head is bright red. My favorite encounters are out in the woods when in a rush of wings, a bird which is roughly the length from my elbow to my fingertips folds up against a large tree trunk nearby.

Sometimes what appears to be a mated pair will land on trees near each other, two stately birds whose only difference is the male has a red mustache. Pairs seem to keep to the same territory year-round, defending it more rigorously during the breeding season. Young birds may disperse during migration, such as the two female hatch-year birds which the banders I know caught last year. Both people came away bloody.

Like all flying birds (as opposed to flightless birds), pileateds weigh much less than they “should” based on mammal standards but are very strong in the ways they need to be. The big chunks of forest at work and at our house provide good habitat for pileateds, which through their excavating work provide services for other forest dwellers. Old nest holes are a good resource for smaller cavity nesting birds from wrens to chickadees. Many non-birds also take shelter or residence in these holes. The rectangular cavities pileateds excavate to get to beetles and ants can provide food for other insect-eaters.

There are plenty of other woodpeckers around these two pieces of forest, but the pileated is the largest and most sensitive to forest maturity. Trees in this area have gained a huge amount of ground since the early years of European clear cutting, and pileated woodpeckers have rebounded from widespread hunting and habitat loss. But not all wooded areas are equal. Density of pileateds appears to decrease with forest fragmentation. That is, the more forests are broken up by other habitat like fields, farms or lawns, the fewer pileateds can live there. Several other species have decreased numbers in the fragmented habitat we create everywhere, although some wildlife species prefer this kind of habitat. These are the ones you see everywhere, like deer and robins.

Not just any forest will do, though. Pileateds need big trees to nest and roost in, and they need trees full of tasty insects. There’s a saying that a healthy forest is full of disease, and that’s certainly true from a woodpecker’s point of view. Age of the forest is less important as long as there are some old dead trees still standing. Snags, as standing dead trees are known in forestry, are certainly not lacking in our forest. Some trunks shed clumps of bark but others are identical to the living trees surrounding them until I look up to where they break off suddenly. Often then I’ll notice many holes from insects benefiting from the death, and sometimes holes made by their pursuers. These signs of life ring out, even in the silence.

2 comments:

Suzanne said...

The beauty of your expressions is like sweet poetry. Hope you'll keep it up!

Clara MacCarald said...

Thanks for reading and commenting! I will definitely try to keep up with it.