Abstract

In a stepwise regression analysis, oak habitat area and habitat isolation were the most important parameters explaining numbers, density, regularity, and probability of presence in two successive years of middle spotted woodpeckers. No estimate of habitat quality contributed significantly to the equations. A 50% regularity of occurrence during the study period was found in oak areas of 75 ha. It is suggested that, for a small population, habitat fragmentation that gives rise to partially isolated subpopulations will make the population more vulnerable. The large area required by Swedish middle spotted woodpeckers compared with Central European ones, is believed to be a result either of an ‘extinction disequilibrium’ or of poorer habitats in the periphery of the distribution area of the species.

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