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Mary Jo Barbato September 8, 2010. This presentation will explore:  Where the birds live,  Why they are endangered, and  What is being done to keep.

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Presentation on theme: "Mary Jo Barbato September 8, 2010. This presentation will explore:  Where the birds live,  Why they are endangered, and  What is being done to keep."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mary Jo Barbato September 8, 2010

2 This presentation will explore:  Where the birds live,  Why they are endangered, and  What is being done to keep them from extinction. (www.allaboutbirds.org)

3 (Jackson, 1994) This species is one of only a few that is found exclusively in the United States. Its natural territory is found in the southeast corner of the country where it lives in pine forests. (Cornell Lab, 2009)

4 The red-cockaded woodpecker has a very specific set of habitat requirements.  Nests only in live trees – most woodpeckers nest in dead trees  Nests specifically in long leaf pine trees  Prefers pine trees infected with red heart fungus. This infection helps in 2 ways:  Softens the wood and makes it easier to make a nesting hole  Pitch flows around the hole and keeps predators away (Cornell Lab, 2009) Long leaf pine forest. (U.S. Fish and Wildlife, 2002)

5 Additional habitat characteristics include:  Old growth trees  Social birds – live in family groups  Doesn’t migrate (Jackson, 1994) (Texas Parks and Wildlife Dept.) Young Male and Female RCWs

6 The RCW lives in the long leaf pine ecosystem. Attributes of this system include:  Fire maintained  Depletes dead trees  Long leaf pine is adapted to fire – produces old growth trees  Makes for an open forest – many food sources for RCWs grow from fire maintained habitats, spiders, beetles, etc.  Other species use RCW’s empty cavities for nesting:  Snakes  Squirrels  Lizards and frogs  Wood ducks  Tree bark covers most of the RCWs food source:  Insects – Spiders, beetles and ants  Fruit  Seeds (U.S. Fish and Wildlife, 2002)

7 Long leaf pine (LLP) ecosystem decline  1700’s brought settlers to the area (U.S. Fish and Wildlife, 2002)  Timber harvesting (U.S. Fish and Wildlife, 2002)  Urbanization (U.S. Fish and Wildlife, 2002)  Agriculture (U.S. Fish and Wildlife, 2002)  Replacement of long leaf with slash pine (Jackson, 1994) 1900s logging of long leaf pine trees (U.S. Fish and Wildlife, 2002)

8 Today’s forests are different  Only 3% of original species’ habitat remains  Trees are younger (LLP don’t suffer from red heart fungus until 80-120 years (Long Leaf Alliance, 2002) )  Lack of fires has made forests dense and complete with dead trees and hardwoods Natural mortality  Female nestlings – 68% mortality rate through 6 months  Male nestlings – 57% mortality rate through 6 months  One nesting per year (U.S. Fish and Wildlife, 2002)

9 RCWs numbers  Since first European settlers, down by 99%  1970 – fewer than 10,000 individual birds  1990s – brought some stabilization to numbers  2002 – 14,000 individual birds  Listed on endangered species list in 1970 (U.S. Fish and Wildlife, 2002)

10 Endangered status has negative effect:  Land owner’s are concerned with regulations associated with species found on their land  Cut down old growth trees to discourage bird nesting so their land doesn’t become controlled by environmental regulations  Prevention of forest fires to make habitat less preferable and to keep danger from urban areas (U.S. Fish and Wildlife, 2002)

11 7 day old RCW being fitted with a tracking ring (Arkive, 2010)  Regular burning of forest floors  Education  Monetary incentives to landowner’s to help attract birds  Most studied woodpecker  Researchers monitoring young birds (Arkive, 2010)

12 Federal and State funded programs:  Mitigation sites for rebound of numbers  Banding of adult and young birds for monitoring  Laws governing land use practices to protect old growth trees (NCDOT, 2003) Placard on tree in North Carolina mitigation site: DO NOT CUT TREES (NCDOT, 2003) Educational sign on tree: DO NOT DISTURB (Lasley, n.d.)

13 Work continues to help stabilize and increase the number of birds by:  Habitat improvement – controlled burning  Artificial nesting boxes  Relocation – young birds are moved to better suited habitats (Texas Parks and Wildlife Dept.) Artificial nesting box (Texas Parks and Wildlife Dept.)

14 The red-cockaded woodpecker remains on the endangered species list but has shown slow signs of stabilization and growth in numbers. Restoration and creation of new habitats, land-use regulations, and public education have proven to be some of the necessary steps in prolonging the viability of this species. (Lasley, n.d.)

15  Arkive-Images of Live Earth. 2010. Red-Cockaded Woodpecker. Retrieved on September 5, 2010 from website: http://www. auburn.edu/academic/forestry_wildlife/longleafalliance/teachers/teacherkit/ woodpecker.htmhttp://www. auburn.edu/academic/forestry_wildlife/longleafalliance/teachers/teacherkit/ woodpecker.htm  The Cornell Lab of Ornithology. 2009. All About Birds. Retrieved on September 7, 2010 from website: http://www.allabout birds.org/guide/Red-cockaded_Woodpecker/idhttp://www.allabout birds.org/guide/Red-cockaded_Woodpecker/id  Jackson, Jerome A. 1994. Red-cockaded Woodpecker (Picoides borealis), The Birds of North America Online (A. Poole, Ed.). Ithaca: Cornell Lab of Ornithology; Retrieved on September 7, 2010 from the Birds of North America Online website: http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/085doi:10.2173/bna.85 http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/085doi:10.2173/bna.85  Lasley, Greg. Greg Lasley Nature Photography. Retrieved on September 7, 2010 from website: http://www.greglasley.net /redcock.htmlhttp://www.greglasley.net /redcock.html  The Long Leaf Alliance. 2002. A Family of Red-cockaded Woodpeckers Makes a Home in a Mature Long Leaf Pine Tree. Retrieved on September 6, 2010 from website: http://www.auburn.edu/academic/forestry_wildlife/longleafalliance/teachers/ teacherkit/woodpecker.htmhttp://www.auburn.edu/academic/forestry_wildlife/longleafalliance/teachers/ teacherkit/woodpecker.htm  NCDOT North Carolina Department of Transportation. 2003. Retrieved on September 7, 2010 from website: http://www.nc dot.org/programs/environment/awards/RedCockaded.htmhttp://www.nc dot.org/programs/environment/awards/RedCockaded.htm  Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Retrieved on September 6, 2010 from website: http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/publications/ pwdpubs/media/pwd_bk_w7000_0013_red_cockaded_woodpecker.pdfhttp://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/publications/ pwdpubs/media/pwd_bk_w7000_0013_red_cockaded_woodpecker.pdf  U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 2002. Red-cockaded woodpecker. Retrieved on September 8, 2010 from website: http:// www.fws.gov/rcwrecovery/pdfs/rcw.pdfhttp:// www.fws.gov/rcwrecovery/pdfs/rcw.pdf


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