Habitat use by Pileated Woodpeckers at two spatial scales in eastern Canada

2000 
To study the multiple spatial scale pattern of habitat use by Pileated Woodpeckers (Dryocopus pileatus L.), we compared the vegetation characteristics at used sites with those at unused sites at macrohabitat (154 ha radius plots) and microhabitat (ca. 0.04 ha radius plots) scales in the La Mauricie region of Quebec. Used macrohabitats were those in which woodpeckers were detected at playback stations. Used microhabitats corresponded to sites showing signs of foraging (i.e., excavated cavities). Pileated Woodpeckers responded to vegetation structure at both scales sampled. Macrohabitats used by woodpeckers had relatively low percentages of mixed shade-intolerant hardwood stands, coniferous stands, and stands of relatively low stem density and tree height, but included high percentages of 51- to 90-year-old stands. Microhabitats used by woodpeckers were characterized most strongly by a high density of large snags but also by a high density of small-diameter snags and a low density of shade-intolerant hardwo...
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