The red- cockaded woodpecker was first identified by Louis Jean Pierre Viellot in 1807 as Picoides borealis or northern woodpecker. Viellot wrongly assumed that this southern species ranged into the northern United States and Canada . In the 1880's Alexander Wilson became the first to apply to the species the common name, red- cockaded woodpecker. This gregarious woodpecker once common in the longleaf pine forests of the southeastern United States has been on the endangered species list since October 1970 (under a law that proceeded the Endangered Species Act of 1973).
The red- cockaded
woodpecker is cardinal-sized, measuring
approximately seven inches long with a fifteen-inch
wingspan. The males of the species wear a black
cap, with a red streak worn
like a cockade on either side. This streak is
the species rarely visible but distinguishing
mark and namesake. Both the male and the female
of the species have a distinctive black nape which
encircles large white patches on the cheek along
with black and white horizontal bars on the back.
The young of the species bear the same general
colors and patterns of the adults, but young males
will have an oval shaped patch of crimson on their
crown.
An intensely social and territorial bird, the red- cockaded woodpecker nests in groups of up to nine members. Groups are made up of one breeding pair, nestlings and male helpers. Male helpers assist in excavating nesting cavities, defending the territory and raising the young. Female young may leave the group during the nesting period (April-June) in search of single male groups, but often the young will stay with the group in hopes of inheriting an existing cavity.
Red - cockaded woodpeckers are one of few birds that build their nests in living trees. The red- cockaded woodpeckers require a living pine tree in diameter of at least 5 3/4 feet that has heartwood infected with fungus. The fungus causes the heartwood of the tree to become soft. The birds then excavate a gourd shaped cavity, roughly 8 to 12 inches in diameter, into the heart of the tree, a process which can take up to 1 to 3 years. Because of the size of tree required to build the nesting cavity, red- cockaded woodpeckers are limited to longleaf pines, which are between 80 to 120 years old, and loblolly pines that are 70 to 100 years old.
The red- cockaded woodpecker has been found in association with other birds such as titmice, bluebirds, and nuthatches. Since these birds all favor an open woodland environment, the sittings probably do not imply any kind of symbiotic association. Vacated red- cockaded woodpecker cavities frequently become home for associated birds, flying squirrels, bees and wasps and amphibians and reptiles.
The tree-crawling rat snake is the red- cockaded woodpecker's primary natural predator. To thwart the rat snake, the woodpeckers will peck at trees to create resin wells from which sap will flow. The sap flow creates a barrier to the rat snake, as even a small amount of resin inhibits movement of the snake's scales. thus preventing it from crawling higher and invading the nest of the woodpecker.
The activities of man have proven, however,
to be the most detrimental to the habitat of the
red- cockaded
woodpecker. The most devastating impacts
from man's encroachment are those generated by
silviculture and agriculture. Silviculture activities
have replaced the native longleaf pine woodlands
with fast growing species such as slash pine and
loblolly pine. These fast-growing species are
frequently harvested before they can provide nesting
habitat for the red-
cockaded woodpecker.
Silviculture techniques such as clear-cutting
have also severely impacted the areas in which
the red- cockaded
woodpecker can nest. Agricultural land
clearing and the use of pesticides and herbicides
are also threatening to the habitat of the
red- cockaded
woodpecker.
The red- cockaded woodpecker feeds primarily on insects such as beetles, ants, caterpillars and wood-boring insects. The woodpecker occasionally eats berries and fruits. It has also been observed to eat the worms that are found in ripening ears of corn. This diet, if digested near an agricultural area, can result in the ingestion of herbicides and pesticides, which can affect the viability of a group.
The original range of the red-cockaded woodpecker, Picoides borealis, extended north from northeastern Oklahoma ( Copan ) through southern Missouri ( Shannon county), Tennessee ( Beersheba and Allardt) and Maryland (Patuxent). The range spread east along the Atlantic coast from North Carolina (Beaufort) to southern Florida (Long Pine Key) and south along the Gulf of Mexico to southeastern Texas ( Houston ). The western range stretched into northwestern Louisiana ( Mansfield ), western Arkansas (Mena) and eastern Oklahoma ( Copan ) [Figure 1 (140K)]. This range, corresponds to the range of the original longleaf pine forests. Today, the longleaf pine forests exists in only six percent of its original area, while the red- cockaded woodpecker is reduced to less than one percent of its original range.
The red- cockaded woodpecker, because of its social nature and unique nesting habits, requires a disappearing ecological niche to survive. A minimum of 200 acres of woodland is necessary to support one nesting group. Most tracts of this size exist only on federal lands within the woodpecker's habitat range. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in conjunction with the U.S. Forest Service, several state agencies and private landholders, is working on a recovery strategy for the red- cockaded woodpecker. The recovery strategy includes longer cutting rotations for forested areas, tagging trees which could be used for red- cockaded woodpecker nesting cavities, creating artificial nesting cavities, maintaining corridors between nesting ranges and disruptive environments, moratoriums on clear-cutting, as well as intervention by man to keep predators out of nesting cavities.
Since the species is limited to isolated tracts of land, disasters can have a huge impact on the existing population. For instance, as a result of Hurricane Hugo in 1989, the red- cockaded woodpecker lost nearly 100,000 acres of its range in the Francis Marion National Forest in South Carolina . In the area impacted by the hurricane, over 80 percent of the viable nesting trees for the red- cockaded woodpecker were destroyed.
It is estimated that the population of the red- cockaded woodpecker currently numbers about 5,000 to 10,000 birds living in the range from northern Florida to Virginia west to southern Missouri and northern Texas . The largest community groups are clustered in the Apalachicola National Forest in northern Florida , the Francis Marion National Forest in South Carolina and private and military land in eastern North Carolina . It is hoped that the data brought together in this bibliography will foster research in preservation of the habitat of the red- cockaded woodpecker and help in saving the species from extinction. |