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Acorn
Woodpecker Melanerpes formicivorus |
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STANFORD LOCATIONS: |
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Location |
Type |
Mating System |
Parental Care |
2ndary Diet |
Strategy |
ALTRICIAL |
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(6 feet - 60 feet) |
(7+) COOP |
MF+ |
HAWKS |
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BREEDING: |
Oak and mixed oak/conif woodland, often in foothills. Requires acorns and storage trees. 1, rarely 2 broods. |
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DISPLAYS: |
Bowing and wing spreading commonly seen; some aerial displays. |
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NEST: |
Usu decid snag, esp oak, also poles. Lined with chips. |
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EGGS: |
White. 1.0" (25 mm). |
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DIET: |
Mostly insects; also acorns, fruit, sap, corn. In fall/winter groups hoard by studding "storage" trees, utility poles, other wooden structures with up to 50,000 acorns. Also hoard almonds/walnuts/ pecans. |
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CONSERVATION: |
Winter resident. |
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NOTES: |
Live in communal groups of up to 16, consisting of at least 2 breeding adults plus their young of previous nestings and cousins. Large clutches result of 2 females. Reproduction highly dependent on size of acorn crop. In CA maintain all-year communal territories, with communal acorn stores. In AZ, some nest as lone pairs and migrate if insufficient food is stored; some AZ populations do not hoard. Young independent at ca. 2 months. Often evicted from nest cavity by starlings. Attack squirrels, jays, nuthatches, titmice, and esp Lewis' Woodpecker (which also store acorns) that raid caches. |
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ESSAYS: |
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REFERENCES: |
Koenig and Mumme, 1987; Stacey and Bock, 1978. |
| Help | Abbreviations | Species-Alphabetical Order | Species-Taxonomic Order | Essays | |
| Except for Stanford Locations, the material in this species treatment is taken, with permission, from The Birder's Handbook (Paul Ehrlich, David Dobkin, & Darryl Wheye, Simon & Schuster, NY. 1988). | |||||