SEASONAL PATTERNS IN-HOME RANGE AND HABITAT USE OF THE GREY-HEADED WOODPECKER PICUS-CANUS AS INFLUENCED BY THE AVAILABILITY OF FOOD

Citation
J. Rolstad et E. Rolstad, SEASONAL PATTERNS IN-HOME RANGE AND HABITAT USE OF THE GREY-HEADED WOODPECKER PICUS-CANUS AS INFLUENCED BY THE AVAILABILITY OF FOOD, Ornis Fennica, 72(1), 1995, pp. 1-13
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Ornithology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00305685
Volume
72
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
1 - 13
Database
ISI
SICI code
0030-5685(1995)72:1<1:SPIRAH>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
Seasonal patterns in diet, home range and habitat use of the Grey-head ed Woodpecker Picus canus were recorded at the Varaldskogen study area , a managed boreal forest located on the Swedish-Norwegian border in s outhcentral Scandinavia. One successfully breeding pair was radio-moni tored throughout a year. Additional telemetry data were collected in s ummer from a male in a pair that failed breeding. In summer the birds almost exclusively preyed upon ant colonies in soil and rotten stumps located in young conifer plantations. In winter, when snow or frost pr ohibited ground feeding, birds were feeding on bark-dwelling insects i n old pine and dead trees. The winter shift in diet and feeding behavi or was accompanied by an approximately 100 times enlargement in home r ange size, increasing from 50-100 ha (n = 3) in summer to 4 500-5 400 ha (n = 2) in winter. With reservations due to small sample size, our data suggests that availability of winter food is critical to the Grey -headed Woodpecker when snow or frozen ground prevents ground-feeding for soil-dwelling ants.