Cj. Conway et Te. Martin, HABITAT SUITABILITY FOR WILLIAMSONS SAPSUCKERS IN MIXED-CONIFER FORESTS, The Journal of wildlife management, 57(2), 1993, pp. 322-328
Williamson's sapsuckers (Sphyrapicus thyroideus) have narrow habitat r
equirements and are sensitive indicators of change in intensively mana
ged forest habitats of western North America. Thus, we studied habitat
suitability for Williamson's sapsuckers at 99 4-ha sites (33 nest sit
es, 66 non-use sites) in mixed-conifer forests in Arizona during 1991.
Nesting success of sapsuckers was high in this habitat (93.2% nest su
ccess, 0.0014 daily mortality, n = 724 nest days), and they preferred
to nest in tall (P < 0.05) aspen snags (P < 0.001) near the bottom (P
= 0.012) of snow-melt drainages with 0-20% of the canopies dominated b
y aspen. Sapsucker nest sites had particularly large (P < 0.05) live a
spen and aspen snags in the surrounding area. Nest sites also had high
(P < 0.05) snag densities (xBAR = 7.65 snags/ha) in the surrounding a
rea, and these snag densities exceeded those commonly used in forest m
anagement plans. Effective snag management should concentrate snags in
groups within low-lying areas and conserve large-sized snags. A Habit
at Suitability Index (HSI) correctly predicted that Williamson's sapsu
ckers should generally prefer drainages over ridgetops, but the model
could not distinguish between use and non-use sites within drainages.
Future HSI models for Williamson's sapsucker should continue to stress
snag density, but should consider aspen snag density separately from
density of other snags, incorporate height and diameter of aspen snags
, and use a more liberal definition of aspens contributing to overstor
y canopy cover.