National Geographic - USA (2021-03)

(Antfer) #1
SOURCES: RODNEY B. SIEGEL, INSTITUTE FOR BIRD POPULATIONS; VICTORIA A. SAAB, FOREST SERVICE; DANIEL YOUNG
AND JACKI WHISENANT, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON; CORNELL LAB OF ORNITHOLOGY; EBIRD

Chickadee
insect consumer


Chipmunk
seed dispersal

Squirrel
seed dispersal

Northern flicker
insect consumer

Flying squirrel
seed and fungus
dispersal

Myotis bat
insect consumer

Bumblebee
pollinator

Mountain
bluebird
insect consumer


Black-backed
woodpecker
(female)

These woodpeckers thrive in
forests that are “pyrodiverse,” a
mosaic of areas burned at differing
severities and juxtaposed with
unburned areas. As fires become
larger and more severe, these
mosaics may be lost, diminishing
habitat quality even for such a
fire-loving species.

HOMESTEADING
Annually

MOVING AWAY
4-8 years
They excavate cavities to make
new nests every year; chicks hatch
in spring. Old nests shelter many
small mammals and other birds.

Black-backed woodpeckers leave
for newly burned forests when
fire-killed trees deteriorate and
beetle populations diminish.

3 4


Second homes
Other habitat-restoring
species live in former
woodpecker nests.

Afterlife of the forest
Once the birds leave, it can
take decades or more to know
if the forest will fully recover.

Shared parenting
Both sexes of the black-backed
woodpecker incubate eggs
and tend their young.

UNITED STATES

CANADA

ALASKA(U.S.)

Black-backed
woodpecker range
(Picoides arcticus)

23
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