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Great Spotted Woodpecker is the most abundant and widespread European woodpecker species, and it thus contributes the most to the number of excavated tree holes – an important habitat resource for secondary hole users. However, majority of nest site characteristics data comes from boreal and temperate forests, with lack of information from Southern Europe. In this article, nest sites of the Great Spotted Woodpecker have been investigated in the continental forests of Croatia – a previously understudied area of this species’ range. A total of 41 active nest-holes found in the breeding seasons 2003 and 2004 are described. Nest-holes were mainly positioned below the crowns, in injuries of branch abscission. Nesting tree species were not used randomly: wild cherry Prunus avium in hill and pedunculate oak Quercus robur in riverine forests were preferred while hornbeam Carpinus betulus and maples Acer sp. were avoided. While tree species used for nesting vary across the Great Spotted Woodpecker range, and thus cannot be used as a uniform nest site predictor, defected wood spots on a tree, like scars of branch abscission, are identified as an important nest site clue and a habitat feature that is spatially more consistent. Nest-holes’ dimensions acquired in this research could not be clearly differentiated from those given for the other parts of the continent.
This paper aims to verify the hypothesis that magpies in urban environments favour poplars as nesting trees, as suggested by previous authors. The fieldwork was conducted in a 180 ha area in a district of Gdańsk (North Poland). The study area held 5294 trees and high shrubs, where 124 magpie nests were found in 10 species of trees. Results of log-linear analysis showed that the magpies chose particular tree species rather than types of spatial tree organization. The lombardy poplar (Populus nigra “Italica”) is the species most frequently chosen as a nest tree, however – the magpies showed a significant preference for trees growing separately or in pairs. The choice index (the ratio of expected to observed frequency) confirmed the magpies’ strong preference for black poplar cultivars and for birches, regardless of the trees’ grouping. The magpies preferred lombardy poplar when they had the choice of two poplar cultivars. This cultivar has a crown suitable for the magpie’s nest construction because of the small angle between the trunk and the branches. The thin, almost vertical branches probably also limit predators from penetrating the crown because these branches do not provide much support for tree climbers. The large-scale planting of lombardy poplars in Polish towns in the 1960s and 1970s has probably contributed to the significant increase of the magpie population in the urban environment.
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