Woodpeckers, like other birds, are raising families at this time of year, and they’re consumed by the need to provide food for their young. Because they find much of their food in the bark and wood of living and dead trees, their feeding sites are usually easy to find. The first clue is often a pile of wood chips scattered around a tree base, like the accumulation at the base of the beech tree shown below.
This tree was alive but just barely–the cankers on the trunk tell us it was infected with beech bark disease. The two excavations visible in the photo, plus many more higher on the trunk, were the sources of the widely scattered debris below.
If your timing is good you may find woodpecker scat among the chips. Here’s a close up–this scat was about 1/4 inch in diameter, contained insect exoskeletons, and had some white uric acid on the mostly black surface. Woodpecker scats are delicate and disintegrate when they’re rained on, so you’re only likely to find them in fresh debris piles.
The cavities below were made in a Norway spruce that was very much alive. New holes are often circular, but as they’re enlarged they become elongated and sometimes connect to form long troughs.
So what exactly are woodpeckers that attack trees eating? Contrary to what you might think, they aren’t eating wood! The photo below shows a close-up view of an excavation. Deep in the recesses of the hole the wood is partially decayed, and you can see that it’s honeycombed with tunnels and chambers. These are the galleries of carpenter ants. They’re actually nests rather than feeding sites–carpenter ants range widely on plant surfaces and on the ground, eating other insects as well as sap and nectar. Both living and dead trees may house carpenter ant colonies, and there could be thousands of ants in one tree, so for a woodpecker it’s well worth the work of excavating holes to get at them.
The photo above also shows cuts and grooves made by the bird’s beak as it chiseled the wood away. These beak gouges are large, up to one half inch wide. The pileated woodpecker, the largest and most powerful of our woodpeckers, was responsible for all of the examples shown above. Only a bird this size could make such large holes, not to mention create such wide beak gouges and leave such large scat.
Although smaller woodpeckers can’t produce the same kinds of massive excavations, they still manage to find plenty of food in the bark and outer wood of trees. Hairy or downy woodpeckers searching for wood-boring grubs removed patches of bark from this hemlock tree.
And the dead maple shown below was also mined for wood inhabiting insects. It’s covered with pockmarks made by smaller beaks, as well as some larger gouges, so it was probably a multi-species feeding site.
Wood, whether living or dead, may host many different types and sizes of insects, including the wood-boring larvae of beetles and moths, insects that nest in wood, predatory arthropods that feed on other wood-inhabiting insects, and creatures that simply find shelter in cracks and crevices. Thanks to this diversity, wood is a rich source of food for many different birds.
An interesting post! I’m a bird watcher and I’ll have to look for woodpecker scat the next time I’m in the woods.