Here also is an in-depth article about Larry and his work.
Eric The Red Returns
Posted: 05 Dec 2015 12:09 PM PST
In early November, this red-breasted sapsucker was still drilling for sap in a deciduous tree. The tree's leaves had already turned yellow and about half were on the ground. I wondered how long the sap would flow and when the sapsucker would switch to evergreen trees.
This bird worked one side of the trunk...
...and then the other.
While working in the upper half of the tree, it switched back and forth between the three main trunks.
Just like pileated woodpeckers, the sapsucker would turn and pick its new destination before it took to the air. Some feeding spots were riddled with holes life this...
...while others were relatively new mining efforts.
I was lucky to catch this shot of the bird hugging the tree. I believe it was hiding from a larger bird, like a crow, passing overhead. It also looks like it may have been listening for the sound of a insect, moving inside the tree.
From the side, it is easy to see how woodpeckers use their tails like the third leg of a tripod.
From the back it looks like the bird may even be sticking one of its tail feathers into a sap well, for a little extra traction.
This is a photo from last winter when we had red-breasted sapsuckers working in three different coniferous trees in the Arboretum. A number of us, watched these birds from mid-December through mid-February. I have been curious ever since about when and if they would return to the evergreen trees. This last week I got at least a partial answer.
Thanksgiving morning was the first day when Duck Bay was nearly completely covered with ice. I suspect the cold night had a hand in slowing the sap flow in the deciduous trees. The slow flow may have started sapsuckers thinking about their alternatives.
Monday one of the sapsuckers returned to this spruce. The dried white sap is leftover "frosting" from last winter's efforts. The dark wet spots are caused by sap flowing from new or freshened excavations.
This sapsucker has been at the tree off and on all week. This morning, in the steady rain, the sapsucker appeared warm and dry stationed a few feet off the ground, under the protecting boughs. It is interesting to note that in the winter the sapsuckers seem to work closer to the ground than during the summer. Logically, if the sap for the whole tree is coming through the trunk then there most be a greater volume and larger flows towards the bottom of the tree.
It turns out that this same tree is the one which was used last winter by this red-naped sapsucker, whom I called Sugar. Red-naped sapsuckers do not normally winter here so it would be a real surprise if she returned this year. This same tree was also "shared" by a red-breasted sapsucker who I called, Eric the Red. Apparently, Eric has returned. Last year, the two birds had a difference of opinion around the concept of sharing. Eric is up to his old tricks, of chasing away competitors. However, so far this year, it is just hummingbirds and ruby-crowned kinglets going after "his" sap. To see more details, from last winter, Click Here.
I have been watching but so far neither of the other two red-breasted sapsuckers, or Sugar, have returned. It will be interesting to see when and if they make it back. I can imagine them working to extract the last little bit of sap from a sweet and tasty, deciduous tree. I suspect such a tree would be situated in a nice warm south-facing location and would still have a few yellow leaves left and a tiny flow of sap. I hope at least a couple more sapsuckers return for the winter.
Note: Last year one of the gardeners in the Arboretum asked me to mention that if we stand on the bark chips near the spruce trees it compresses the bark. This slows the decomposition and the release of nutrients for the trees. In the case of these trees, which are being actively "mined" by sapsuckers, kinglets and hummingbirds (and last year squirrels as well) I suspect they need all the nutrients they can get. I am doing my best to stay off the wood chips.
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