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Downy
Woodpecker
Woodpeckers
are a family of birds sharing several
characteristics that separate them from other
avian families. Most of the special features of
their anatomy are associated with the ability to
excavate wood. The straight, chisel-shaped bill
is formed of strong bone overlaid with a hard
covering and is quite broad at the nostrils in
order to spread the force of pecking. A covering
of feathers over the nostrils keeps out pieces of
wood and wood powder. The pelvic bones are wide,
allowing for attachment of muscles strong enough
to move and hold the tail, which is so important
for climbing. Another special anatomical trait of
woodpeckers is the long, barbed tongue that
searches crevices and cracks for food. The
salivary glands produce a sticky, glue-like
substance that coats the tongue and, along with
the barbs, makes the tongue an efficient device
for capturing insects.
There are 198 species of woodpeckers found
throughout the world, 13 of them occurring in
Canada. The smallest and perhaps most familiar of
the species found in Canada is the Downy
Woodpecker. It is similar in appearance to the
larger Hairy Woodpecker. Both are black and white
with a broad white stripe down the back from the
shoulders to the rump. The wings are checkered in
a black and white pattern that shows through on
the wings' undersides, and the breast and flanks
are white. The crown of the head is black; cheeks
and necks are adorned by black and white lines.
The males of both species have a small scarlet
patch, like a red pompon, at the back of the
crown.
Although they look very much alike, the Downy and
the Hairy Woodpecker have distinguishing
characteristics. The Downy's outer tail feathers
are not all white as are the Hairy Woodpecker's,
but are barred with black. The Downy is about 6
cm smaller than the Hairy, measuring only 15-18
cm from the tip of its bill to the tip of its
tail. And the Downy's bill is shorter than its
head, whereas the Hairy's bill is as long as or
longer than its head length.
Male and female Downy Woodpeckers are basically
the same size, weighing in the range of 22-33 g.
The females have a longer tail and slightly
shorter bill.
Like most woodpeckers, the Downy is a climber.
Its short legs and two toes pointing forwards and
two backwards on each foot give the bird an
excellent grip for climbing. It climbs by
propping its stiff, sharply pointed tail feathers
against the support while shifting its leghold.
With its body close to the trunk or branch and
its head bobbing, the bird "hitches"
upwards, backs down spiraling, and nimbly darts
sideways at incredible speed.
The Downy Woodpecker occurs over the greater part
of the North American continent, from the Gulf
States northwards. In Canada in the northernmost
part of its range, it is found from Newfoundland
across to James Bay, the northern Prairie
Provinces, the southern Mackenzie District of the
Northwest Territories, northern British Columbia,
and the Yukon. Downys in the northern parts of
the range migrate southward in the winter, but
these migrations are somewhat irregular,
depending on the available food supplies.
Downy
Woodpecker Range Map
Woodpeckers live where
trees grow. The Downy Woodpecker is at home in a
variety of wooded areas across its range, in the
northern mixed forests and in the deciduous
(broad-leaved) forests farther south, in woodlots
and parklands, in orchards, and even in the parks
and avenues of suburb, town and city. It prefers
places where broad-leaved trees, such as poplars,
birches and ashes, let in the light among the
evergreens. Forest edges and areas around
openings in the denser forests are also favored
places. In the western part of its range it can
be found in alder and willow growth. The Downy
shares these habitats with other kinds of
woodpeckers, but there are differences in their
selection of nest sites and in their choice of
food. Each species thus occupies its own niche in
the environment.
Downy Woodpecker pairs often return to the same
nesting area of approximately 2 ha every year of
their adult life. Male and female Downys
sometimes occupy separate sleeping holes in the
trunks of trees, and they may even select the
same sleeping holes they had excavated in a
former season.
As early as February or March a Downy Woodpecker
pair indicate occupation of their nesting site by
flying around patrolling it and by drumming
short, fast tattoos with their bills on dry twigs
or other resonant objects scattered around the
territory. The drumming serves as a means of
communication between the members of the pair and
informs other Downys of their occupation of the
land. Downys also have a variety of calls. They
utter a "tick, tchick, tcherrick,"
and both male and female add a sharp whinnying
call during the nesting season.
During the breeding season Downy Woodpeckers
defend their territory against trespassers of
their species. Encounters with intruders result
in hostile displays: the opponents parade in
front of each other in threatening poses, bills
gaping, wings raised and fully opened, the birds
twisting and turning like small windmills. The
Downy male engages the male trespassers and the
female the females, while their respective
partners look on. These demonstrations may go on
for several hours but seldom end in actual
fighting. Usually the intruder is chased away or
simply disappears.
After establishing their territory the Downy pair
look for a suitable tree in which to excavate
their nest cavity. They are especially attracted
to dead trees or stubs dotted with old holes from
former nestings. Downy Woodpeckers will also use nest
boxes. They may start several holes in
different trees before the final choice is made,
usually by the female. The entrance hole may be
anywhere from 1.5 to 18.0 m above the ground, but
is usually from 3.6 to 9.0 m.
The pair require about two or three weeks to
excavate their nest hole, which has the form of a
flask 12-15 cm wide and about 20-30 cm deep. The
entrance is through a short narrow neck at the
top.
The male does most of the drilling. He spends
nearly half of the daylight hours each day
working on the hole in average sessions of about
20 minutes, resting and feeding in between. First
he chisels out the passage, making it just wide
enough for himself and his mate to squeeze
through. Laboriously he taps and digs out the
walls of the cavity, widening and deepening the
room inside and throwing the loose chips out over
his shoulder. When the hole is deep enough to
allow him to turn around inside, he brings the
chips out in his bill and scatters them with a
shake of the head. Henceforth he usually sleeps
in the cavity at night.
The female occupies herself flying around,
feeding, and chasing intruders. When the nest
hole nears completion, she becomes more
interested in it and begins to work on it
diligently. The pair devotes most of their free
time to courtship involving calling and drumming,
pursuits and displays.
The female Downy Woodpecker usually lays four or
five white eggs and occasionally six or seven.
During the egg laying, male and female take turns
guarding the nest by sitting in the doorway.
After incubation of the eggs starts, the birds
take turns warming them during the day in shifts
lasting from 15 to 30 minutes. Most changeovers
take place directly and immediately at the nest.
At night the male remains on the eggs alone while
the female sleeps elsewhere. In this manner, the
eggs are covered nearly all of the time during
the Downy Woodpecker's 12-day incubation period.
When the young woodpeckers hatch, they are tiny
helpless creatures, almost naked, sprawled at the
bottom of the cavity. For a few days the parents
warm the nestlings as they did the eggs and
occasionally bring them small insects for food.
As the nestlings grow, the parents gradually stop
brooding and spend more time collecting food for
their young. When the parent arrives with food in
the bill there is a swell in the nestlings'
chippering noises from within the nest. The
parent dives headfirst into the cavity and
touches the swollen corner of a nestling's mouth
with its bill. As the mouth springs open, the
parent pushes the meal down the nestling's
throat. And while the nestling subsides, the
parent picks up a dropping and flies away with
it.
Thus the nestlings are fed and their nest is kept
clean until they are 17 or 18 days old, when they
are almost fully grown. They look like their
parents, except that the crowns of the young
males are tinted red or rust-red or pinkish, and
those of the females are striped or dotted with
white. The young ones are now able to crawl up
the walls of the cavity and take turns sitting in
the doorway, looking out. To meet the nestlings'
increasing demands for food, the parents bring
large meals about every three minutes. Each of
four nestlings is therefore fed four or five
times in the hour.
As the time approaches for the young to leave the
nest the parents slow down the feedings, making
the nestlings livelier and hungrier. The one in
the doorway pops in and out with great vigor and
calls loudly, but is in no hurry. Almost a day
passes before the fledgling, now as large as its
parents and spotlessly clean, pops out far enough
to spread the untried wings. Once outside it is
able to fly quite a distance before it achieves a
safe landing.
When the fledglings are all out, they hide among
the green leaves in the tall trees and call for
the parents to come and feed them. Within a week
they begin following the parents, begging for
food with sharp calls and flapping wings. At the
age of three or four weeks the young birds are
fully capable of looking after themselves. It is
at this stage in the life cycle that mortality is
greatest, when the young are out of the nest and
no longer protected by the vigilance of their
parents.
The adult birds begin to molt their worn and
dirty plumage while the young are still in the
nest. The strong, central pair of tail feathers
is molted only after all the other tail feathers
have been replaced. This ensures that the
woodpecker's climbing ability is not hampered
during the molting period. The complete molt
takes about two months, during which time each
bird keeps much to itself, resting and feeding.
When the molt is over in September, the Downy
Woodpecker emerges with the white part of its
fresh winter plumage showing a faintly yellow
tinge that eventually is lost by wear.
The young Downy Woodpeckers also shed their
juvenile plumages. Their molt starts in late
summer and ends in full adult plumage. Their
crowns are jet black, and at the back of the head
the young males wear the bright red spot of the
adult.
In the spring and summer the Downy Woodpecker
feeds on free-flying and hidden insect life, as
it becomes available. After the young hatch, the
need to select food suitable for the nestlings at
various stages of growth and gradually to
increase the speed of the feedings compels the
Downy Woodpecker to seek larger and more easily
caught prey, such as caterpillars, mayflies, and
moths. It also takes small wild fruits in season.
After the nesting season, the Downy Woodpecker
resumes its specialized feeding habits. It hunts
down myriads of small insects and larvae that
infest trees and lie hidden in cracks and
crannies along branchlets, twigs, and down the
trunk. The Downy's small size enables it to hunt
along the upper branches of trees, while the
larger heavier woodpecker species concentrate on
more solid areas such as the trunk.
Unlike some other species, such as the Red-headed
Woodpecker, Downy Woodpeckers do not cache food
for winter. During the winter a pair of Downy
Woodpeckers may do a thorough job of ridding an
infested tree of tiny scale insects. With its
sharp bill boring small round holes or prying
open the insects' hiding places, the woodpecker
fetches out its food with its long agile tongue.
Often the birds spend most of the daylight hours
going over areas of good yield in the same trees,
until they retire just before sunset, each to its
own sleeping hole in the trunk of a tree.
The woodpecker's first response to danger is to
use a tree trunk or branch as a shield. Many a
Downy Woodpecker has saved itself from the
grasping talons of a hawk or the claws and bill
of a shrike by dodging swiftly sideways behind
the trunk of a tree.
Nestlings raised in holes are, of course, much
safer than those in open nests. The narrow
entrance to the Downy Woodpecker's nest, hewn to
size, protects both the adults and the young from
practically all predators except snakes. Even a
squirrel, scratching and gnawing at the soft wood
to get at the fledglings within, has little
chance of getting past the watchful defender
sitting in the passage way, its awl-like beak at
the ready. But, if a Downy is caught at night
behind a rotting doorway by some tree-climbing
marauder, its fate is sealed.
From a human viewpoint, few wild birds have a
record as irreproachable as that of the Downy
Woodpecker. Its sober ways and its pest-killing
activities merit our respect and attention.
Coveside
Bird House Features

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