Abstract

Forest management usually reduces the diversity and amount of substrates in which woodpeckers can excavate holes. In such conditions the recorded patterns of nest site selection could reflect a more reduced array of substrates than the species' nest site preferences. We analysed new data on nest sites of Middle Spotted Woodpeckers Leiopicus medius collected during 27 breeding seasons (1987–2013) in the strictly protected fragments of the Bialowieza National Park in Poland. The birds could use diverse excavation substrates, of various statures, that varied in condition from living and healthy to dead and completely rotten. Middle Spotted Woodpeckers used a wide array of tree species, with little overlap in the species used in the riverine habitat (mostly Alnus glutinosa, and Fraxinus excelsior) and oak—hornbeam habitats (Carpinus betulus and Quercus robur). The birds preferred to excavate in Q. robur but avoided Tilia cordata and Picea abies. They placed holes in large trees (median girth at breast height:...

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