Primary Cavity Excavators (PCEs) are an influential guild of animals that excavate cavities in trees for nesting and roosting. Vacated PCE cavities provide nest and shelter sites for a large number of animals - in some regions, up to one third of all species use or rely on PCE cavities. Thus, many species of PCE are considered ecosystem engineers and ecological keystones, and conservation of PCEs is important for biodiversity and ecosystem health. In this study, I explored nesting ecology, space use, and distribution of PCEs in the northwestern U.S.A. In chapter 1, I examined the role of wood hardness in limiting nest site selection. I found that interior wood hardness at nests differed from random sites, and nests of all species conta...
We propose that cavity-nesting bird communities are structured in nest webs analogous to food webs, ...
Cavity‐nesting birds and mammals exhibit species‐specific nest‐site selection for tree characteristi...
Nest-site selection is crucial for birds' breeding success and, therefore, studies on this topic are...
Woodpeckers and other excavators create most of the holes used by secondary cavity nesters (SCNs) in...
Nest-site availability limits cavity-nesting populations in harvested forests, and woodpeckers are o...
Woodpeckers serve as primary cavity excavators in fire dominated forests. Secondary cavity users (SC...
Thesis (M.S., Biological Sciences (Biological Conservation)) -- California State University, Sacrame...
Although primary cavity-nesting species are capable of excavating new cavities, they often reuse old...
Lewis’s Woodpeckers (Melanerpes lewis) are Threatened in Canada and rely on pre-existing cavities fo...
Ecosystem engineers influence other organisms by altering and modifying the local environment. Woodp...
Cavity nesting communities are structured in a complex hierarchy of interdependencies based on the ...
In forests worldwide, tree-cavity supply can limit populations of the 10-40% of bird and mammal spec...
Woodpeckers are the primary tree-cavity producers in North America and, through their process of cav...
Over the last 50 years the intensive use of even-aged management practices in the boreal forest of C...
University of Minnesota M.S. thesis. May 2012. Major: Natural resources science & Management. Adviso...
We propose that cavity-nesting bird communities are structured in nest webs analogous to food webs, ...
Cavity‐nesting birds and mammals exhibit species‐specific nest‐site selection for tree characteristi...
Nest-site selection is crucial for birds' breeding success and, therefore, studies on this topic are...
Woodpeckers and other excavators create most of the holes used by secondary cavity nesters (SCNs) in...
Nest-site availability limits cavity-nesting populations in harvested forests, and woodpeckers are o...
Woodpeckers serve as primary cavity excavators in fire dominated forests. Secondary cavity users (SC...
Thesis (M.S., Biological Sciences (Biological Conservation)) -- California State University, Sacrame...
Although primary cavity-nesting species are capable of excavating new cavities, they often reuse old...
Lewis’s Woodpeckers (Melanerpes lewis) are Threatened in Canada and rely on pre-existing cavities fo...
Ecosystem engineers influence other organisms by altering and modifying the local environment. Woodp...
Cavity nesting communities are structured in a complex hierarchy of interdependencies based on the ...
In forests worldwide, tree-cavity supply can limit populations of the 10-40% of bird and mammal spec...
Woodpeckers are the primary tree-cavity producers in North America and, through their process of cav...
Over the last 50 years the intensive use of even-aged management practices in the boreal forest of C...
University of Minnesota M.S. thesis. May 2012. Major: Natural resources science & Management. Adviso...
We propose that cavity-nesting bird communities are structured in nest webs analogous to food webs, ...
Cavity‐nesting birds and mammals exhibit species‐specific nest‐site selection for tree characteristi...
Nest-site selection is crucial for birds' breeding success and, therefore, studies on this topic are...