Re: [Va-bird] pileated woodpecker question

  • From: "Ken Hinkle" <kencora@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "Kevin Shank" <birds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, <shenvalbirds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 07 Jun 2011 13:13:00 -0400

Kevin.

A few years back Tom Mizell and I watched Pileateds nesting for three years straight in the same snag in Paul State Forest. Often one woodpecker would fly in close to the nest hole and call loudly, then shortly the mate in the nest hole would pop out and the other would go in. This may have been during both incubation and feeding young. So, both male and female seem to share responsibilities.

Ken Hinkle
Bridgewater

----- Original Message ----- From: "Kevin Shank" <birds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <shenvalbirds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, June 07, 2011 11:26 AM
Subject: [Va-bird] pileated woodpecker question


Hello Friends,



The boys and I have been watching/photographing a pileated woodpeckers at a
nest in the JMU Arboretum over the last number of weeks. Between yesterday
and this morning, we spent between five and six hours, photographing from a
distance using long telephoto lenses.  This is no different than we have
been doing periodically since the nest was discovered.  However, during
these last five or six hours, only the male bird would feed the young.



I was beginning to wonder if something happened to the female, but one of
the boys noticed a second pileated woodpecker in the distance while the male
had disappeared into the nest hole.  Of course we cannot prove the second
woodpecker seen was the mate, but our question is whether it is typical for
the male to primarily feed the young?  I would have assumed the feeding
responsibility would be a shared one, and we certainly photographed both
feeding the young in the past weeks.  Have any of you ever noticed whether
feeding primarily falls to either the male or the female?  And/or if there
is fluctuation between genders-male back/forth for hours, then female, etc.?



Several weeks ago I thought it was roughly every other trip that the male or
female would return.



Thanks for your input.



Kevin Shank

Rockingham County













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