Abstract
We recorded habitat use and movement patterns of 2 male and 3 female Grey-headed Woodpeckers with radio telemetry in coastal northern Sweden during the winter 1997/98. Home ranges of females were c.20 km2 large, whereas the home ranges of the males tended to be smaller. Individual birds displayed long movements between day and night locations (maximum 6 km). The woodpeckers showed strong affinity to human settlements (=feeding stations) during daytime. No selection for sites with high abundance of large deciduous trees was found in conjunction with roosting. All radio-equipped woodpeckers disappeared within one-week in early April. Aerial surveys indicated a net displacement of the females of >50 km. Three of the marked woodpeckers (1 male and 2 females) reappeared at their old winter home range in October/November 1998, suggesting a migratory strategy. The findings are discussed in relation to recent population trends and the status of the Grey-headed Woodpecker on the Swedish Red Data list.
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CITATION STYLE
Edenius, L., Brodin, T., & Sunesson, P. (1999). Winter behaviour of the Grey-headed Woodpecker Picus canus in relation to recent population trends in Sweden. Ornis Svecica, 9(1–2), 65–74. https://doi.org/10.34080/os.v9.22917
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