";s:4:"text";s:2743:" The Red-naped Sapsucker and Williamson's Sapsucker can be found in the southern areas of western Canada and on through to Mexico. Yellow-bellied Sapsucker / Pic maculé (Sphyrapicus varius) Seasonal status at MBO: JAN : FEB : MAR APR ... McGill Bird Observatory, September 2006. The red-naped sapsucker is one of four North American woodpeckers in the genus Sphyrapicus. They make the excavation process a bit easier on themselves by choosing trees that have softer wood due to some type of fungus or decay. It has no subspecies. Yellow-bellied Sapsucker habitat, behavior, diet, migration patterns, conservation status, and nesting. All four … Females have a white throat.
It spends summers in Canada and the northeastern United States and migrates to the southern states in the winter. Photo by Marie-Anne Hudson, McGill Bird Observatory, October 2007 . Look For The yellow-bellied sapsucker is a medium-sized woodpecker (8 ½ inches in length) with extensive black-and-white barring over much of its back, wings, and tail. The American yellow-bellied sapsucker can attack, kill trees, and seriously degrade wood quality. The lemon-yellow belly can be difficult to see on perched birds. The Yellow-bellied Sapsucker also uses the forest to nest. Adults have a brilliant red crown patch and adult males have a red throat patch outlined in black. Lastly, the Red-breasted Sapsucker is located along the Pacific shores of North America. It migrates to the southeastern states southward to Panama and the West Indies in winter. Song: Yellow-bellied Sapsucker Song Migration: While most woodpeckers in the United States are not know for long migration, the Yellow-bellied Sapsucker is strongly migratory, wintering in the southeastern U.S. down through Central America, and summering in the northern U.S. and Canada. Both males and females will excavate holes in living trees including aspen, birch, maple, beech, and elm. Trees in Danger . The sapsuckers will often return to previously used trees year after year. The Yellow-bellied Sapsucker covers the largest region of North America from western Canada to Newfoundland, down into Mexico and east of the Rocky Mountains. Photo by Marie-Anne Hudson, McGill Bird Observatory, August 2008 . The breeding range of the Yellow-bellied Sapsucker extends across Canada to the northeastern United States, with an isolated population in the Appalachian Mountains of Virginia, Tennessee, and North Carolina.