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January 2020 Articles

Just Rambling January 2020:
Scripture to live by: Hebrews 12:1-2
Spiritual Corner: The Complication of Caring Too Much or Too Little
Plant pecan trees in winter
LSU AgCenter appoints animal agent for north, central La.
Is it possible for a FOREST PRODUCER to benefit from EQIP?
Farmers hear about challenges of growing hemp
Scientists discuss stressors as cause of roseau cane dieback
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service Announces New LA State Conservationi
• Woodpeckers designed for life with wood
NCBA Applauds U.S. Senate Introduction of Real MEAT Act
America's Cattle Producers Hail House Passage Of USMCA
AS WORLD CELEBRATES NEW YEAR, CATTLEMEN CELEBRATE NEW TRADE DEALS
Quote:
USMCA Is a Victory for Farmers and Ranchers
U.S. Farmers Eager to Return to Global Competitiveness
Disaster Aid, Farm Stress, Broadband Funding Wins for Farmers and Ra
Broadband Map Fix Will Reveal Needs
2019 Agriculture & Forestry Year in Review
Louisiana the first state to get federal approval of state industrial hemp Plan
USMCA Will Be Major Victory for Louisiana Ag Producers
Carrying our Farm Values Into the Future
Don’t overlook this ornamental tree with edible fruit
Student Farmer Sales Exemption for Louisiana 4-H and FFA
AgCenter announces rice producer meetings
North Louisiana forestry forum set for Jan. 17
Hemp meeting draws crowd
Without God there is no virtue because there is no prompting of the conscience,
2020 Tri-State Soybean Forum highlights input for
Louisiana Broiler Hatchery Released: November 20, 2019
Louisiana Bred Rules & Procedures for goats
Just Rambling December 2019:
Spiritual Corner: The Messy Truth About Forgiveness
4-H News
Migratory Bird Harvest Information Program (HIP)
Study looks at second-crop rice, crawfish production
If we ever forget that we are one nation under God, then we will be a nation gon
AgCenter school teaches artificial insemination
LSU AgCenter names soil fertility, agronomy specialist
Wild Turkey Populations Rebound as a Result of Years of
Strain Response to Poultry Ban Lifted in China  
It’s not a flower, it’s a bract
USDA Announces Funding to Control Feral Swine in Louisiana
Introducing The Preserving Family Farms Act of 2019
Women in Ag Survey Reveals Business Acumen and Leadership
Giving Thanks in All Seasons
Farmers and Ranchers Need Full Japanese Trade Agreement, Texas Farm Bureau Tells
New Bill Would Help Livestock Haulers

(48 articles found)

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Woodpeckers designed for life with wood

Woodpeckers designed for life with wood The Louisiana Forestry Association and its people are about forests, trees and wood. A suite of birds is as well and have been at it much longer.
The woodpeckers.
They are equipped with nature’s design for life with wood. They have stiff tail feathers which function as a brace for perching on tree boles. Most birds have toes arranged three forward and one aft, but woodpeckers have two forward and two aft, suited for clinging to vertical surfaces, i.e., trees.
Stout bills are good for exposing subsurface prey in wood. Woodpeckers have an especially hard cranium, good for head banging on hard surfaces, called drumming. Drumming seems to be an important part of reproductive behavior. For woodpeckers, probably not us.
As part of an earlier research project, we installed plastic foam cylinders in young pine stands with little dead wood. Woodpeckers excavated cavities and roosted in them, but none reproduced. We concluded no noise from drumming on the soft structures precluded mating.
Another characteristic is their tongues with lateral barbs. Woodpecker tongues can be projected outward into crevices when they forage for arthropods in wood. I captured birds in mist nets as part of my doctorate at LSU. Captured woodpeckers were a special challenge to extract from nets. They would wrap their tongues up in the net strands. Sometimes I even had to cut the net from around their tongues to free them.
Woodpeckers play an important ecological role. They can be keystone species, representative of particular ecosystems. Their feeding can impact arthropod populations. And their excavated cavities can serve as roost and nest sites for secondary cavity nesters, such as some insects, some bat species and some birds, such as Wood Ducks, Eastern Blue Birds and Great Crested Flycatchers.
One common feature in identifying woodpeckers in flight is their pattern. They have an undulating pattern — flap-flap-flap-upward, then sail downward, then repeat. Also, most can be identified by their vocalizations.
Here is a brief overview of the common woodpeckers of Louisiana.
Downy: Often comes to suit feeders. Very small, ladder back horizontal black-and-white strips on back. Very similar to the Hairy, which is found here also. The Downy’s bill is smaller. Males of both species have a red patch on their head.
Red-cockaded: Small, ladder back. Inhabits older, open-grown, pine stands. The only woodpecker that nests and forages in living pines. Family groups, called clans, nest and forage cooperatively. On the Endangered Species list, but recovering. They peck around cavity entrances to stimulate resin flow which deters predators. Takes several years to excavate a cavity, but will use artificial cavities, called inserts.
Red-bellied: Medium size. Widespread. The red on the belly is only conspicuous on a specimen belly up in a museum case. They also have the ladder back black-and-white design. The red on their head is more extensive and covers the crown on the males.
Red-headed: Medium size. Adults of both sexes have completely red heads. Juveniles have dark heads. Nests in open habitat, such as dead trees in beaver ponds. Sometimes nests in telephone poles, which isn’t good for the poles or woodpeckers. Their call is similar to the Red-bellied.
Pileated: Large black and white, crow size. Males have more red on the head than females. Excavate large almost rectangular entrance nest cavities in large trees. Often mistaken for the Ivory-billed woodpecker, which is probably extinct.
Ivory-billed: Probably extinct. Large, conspicuous white on back. Whitish bill. Call quite different from Pileated. Last documented viable population in bottomland hardwoods of Louisiana.
Northern Flicker: Medium size. Yellow underwings. White tail patch. Black whisker mark on face of males. Common in winter in Louisiana. Most flickers nest farther north. Forages on the ground more than other woodpeckers. Eats ants, fire ants I don’t know. Colloquially called the yellow hammer, the state bird of Alabama.
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker: Medium sized. Identified by white vertical stripe on wing, and cat-like call. Both sexes have red on the head, male also red on chin. Sapsuckers are the ones that make the rows of horizontal small holes on the boles of trees, mostly hardwoods. Sapsuckers winter here, but breed and nest further north.
So here’s to the woodpeckers. Maybe they were the inspiration for the bumper sticker — Wood is Wonderful. Get your binoculars, a bird guide such as David Sibley’s Guide to Birds, and see which of these wood mongers you can identify. (Dr. James G. Dickson-Award winning -author, researcher, wildlife biologist, and professor. LFA Director Emeritus. Email him at jgdickson14@gmail.com

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