Northern Flicker
Physical Description
Distribution & Habitat
Diet
Pair Formation & Territoriality
Nesting Behavior
Winter Movement & Dispersal
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The Northern Flicker includes five subspecies: Yellow-shafted Flicker, Red-shafted Flicker, Gilded Flicker, Guatemalan Flicker, and Cuban Flicker. The subspecies are distinguishable by a few morphological characteristics.
Male and female Northern Flickers look similar. They are grayish brown woodpeckers with horizontal barring across the back and wings. The tail is white with brownish black bars and solid black tips. The breast is light brown to off-white and has blackish brown spots. The upper breast has a black crescent-shaped patch, or bib. The ventral surface and dorsal shafts of the wings and tail can be either bright yellow or salmon, depending on the subspecies. Subspecies also differ in throat color, crown color, and the presence of a red blaze at the nape of the neck. Present only in males is a malar stripe, or mustache, extending from the base of the bill downward below the cheek. This mark is red in some subspecies, black in others.
Juvenile plumage resembles that
of the adult, but the colors are less bright. Some features, such as the malar
stripe and black bib, are less distinct.
Distribution and Breeding Habitat
Northern Flickers are
found throughout the North American continent from below the tree line in Alaska
and Canada to Mexico, Central America, and Cuba. The three subspecies found on
the North American continent are Yellow-shafted (east of the Rocky Mountains),
the Red-shafted (west of the Rocky Mountains), and the Gilded (in the
Southwest).
Flickers live in a variety of woodland habitats. They have adapted well to human habitation and occur in urban, suburban, and rural areas, in parks, and near farms and woodlots. They nest near clearings or other open areas, at forest edges, and in forests interspersed with meadows, fields, and clear-cuts. Nests are also found in savannas and near swamps, ponds, and recently flooded areas containing snags. The Gilded Flicker subspecies nests in saguaro cacti.
Northern Flicker numbers have
declined over the past 20 years. This decline is thought to result from a
combination of factors, including intense competition with the European Starling
for nest sites and reduction in possible nest sites due to the removal of dead
and dying trees. Although the decline hasn’t reached threatening levels, it is
important to monitor the population, for these birds are one of the main species
responsible for excavating holes and providing nest sites for many secondary
cavity-nesting birds.
Diet
Northern Flickers are the most
terrestrial of all North American woodpeckers. These birds are commonly seen
hopping along the ground foraging for ants. In fact, flickers eat more ants than
any other bird species in North America. Flickers also forage in the trees,
where they hawk and glean beetles, wasps, and caterpillars and probe into the
bark for insect larvae. They also eat worms, acorns, nuts, and grains. During
late autumn, winter, and early spring, flickers consume berries and other fruits
of wild trees and shrubs. Occasionally they visit feeders.
Pair Formation and Territoriality
The northern populations of
flickers return to their breeding ground from mid-March to early April. A few
weeks after their arrival, courtship begins. By late April and early May, pairs
have bonded and begun to breed. These birds are monogamous and mate for life,
although a bird may find a new mate to replace one that has died or
disappeared.
Both the male and female aggressively defend a territory, which consists of the prospective nest site and its immediate surroundings. Vocalizations and "drumming" are used to define and defend territory boundaries. Once incubation begins, however, the pair spends less time defending their territory, and other pairs often move into the vicinity and nest nearby.
Nesting Behavior
Nest Building: Northern Flickers excavate their nest cavities. They are considered weak
excavators, mainly digging their nests in dead or decaying trees that are
weathered and have weak wood. It is unknown which of the pair selects the nest
site, but the location depends on the presence of weak wood, not on the presence
of a particular tree species. In addition, flicker nests have been found in
poles, fence posts, haystacks, and ground burrows. These woodpeckers also nest
in boxes, but boxes should be packed tightly with sawdust for the birds to
excavate. (See "A Nest-Box Plan for Northern Flickers" in Section 1 for
details.)
The more closely the nest box imitates a "punky" tree, the more desirable it will appear to Northern Flickers.
The birds can take 12 to 15 days to excavate a cavity. Although both sexes participate, initially the male does most of the excavating, the female finishing the job. No additional nesting materials are brought to the cavity.
Northern Flickers compete intensively with European Starlings, squirrels, screech-owls, and American Kestrels for nest sites.
Egg Laying: Shortly after the birds finish the cavity, the female begins egg-laying. She lays semi-glossy, pure white eggs early in the morning, adding one egg per day until there are five to eight eggs laid. As few as three eggs and as many as 12 have been reported in a clutch, but larger clutches usually represent eggs from two females. Clutches laid early in the breeding season tend to be larger than those laid later.
Once egg laying begins, the
birds never leave the nest unattended. Adults take turns remaining near or at
the nest site.
Incubation: The incubation
period for Northern Flickers is 11 to 14 days, and incubation begins one to two
days before the female lays the last egg. Both sexes incubate the eggs. The
female is most attentive toward the nest during early incubation, but later the
male is the more attentive of the pair and remains with the eggs at night.
Nestling Care:
The young hatch within one to two days of each other. The female broods the
newly hatched young, but as the nestlings grow, female attentiveness decreases
and male attentiveness increases. The male remains in the cavity with the
nestlings at night. Shortly after hatching, the young can produce a unique
buzzing sound, an ability that lasts until they are nearly full-feathered. The
nestlings make the sound whenever something approaches the nest cavity and
researchers speculate that the noise, which resembles an agitated swarm of bees,
may frighten away squirrels and other nest predators.
The nestlings are fed
regurgitant by both parents. After three weeks, the young can climb to the
entrance and meet the parents for food. After 24 to 28 days, the parents coax
the young to leave the nest by withholding food and calling to them. When they
leave the nest, the fledglings can fly short distances and they do not return to
the nest site. The fledglings depend upon the parents for food and protection
for two to three weeks. Family groups are often seen feeding together into late
summer.
Northern Flickers usually raise
one brood per breeding season, but in the southern part of the range, pairs
frequently raise two.
Winter Movement and Dispersal
Some populations of flickers are
migratory. The degree of movement depends on subspecies and region. Northern
populations tend to migrate in late autumn to the southeastern United States.
Migratory groups can consist of a few to a hundred individuals. Southern
populations are non-migratory. Although they don’t migrate, these populations
make small movements, seeking shelter from winter weather in coniferous forests
and swamps. Other populations move from higher to lower elevations.
Flickers maintain winter home
ranges, but we don’t know if they defend these areas. First-year adults may
return to their natal area to breed for the first time. Older adults are highly
site-faithful, returning to a particular breeding site year after
year.