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THE

AMERICAN NATURALIST.

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VOL. XVI. MAY, 1882. No. 5.

THE ACORN-STORING HABIT OF THE CALIFORNIA WOODPECKER.

BY ROBERT E. C. STEARNS.

THE acorn-storing habit of the Californian woodpecker (Melanerpes formicivorus), has long been known to the "country folk" and others who frequent the country and take notes by the way. Before the American occupation, the Spanish Californians had observed this curious habit, and gave the bird the appropriate and musical name "el carpintero." No doubt, still further back the aborigines had their name for the carpintero, and regarded the bird as invested with superior power, or possessed by some unseen or hidden influence, which placed it above its feathered congeners and proved it to be in some mysterious way a little closer to the heart of nature.

It is highly probable that if we knew the traditions of the former red men of California, we should find some quaint story or curious legend connected with this ingenious and interesting bird. I find no mention of this woodpecker in either Bancroft's1 or Powers" ethnological volumes, relating to the California tribes. During a recent visit to Napa county, I noticed near the house where I stayed, on Howell mountain, a fallen pine of the species known to botanists as Pinus ponderosa, the yellow pine of the woodsmen, the bark of which was full of acorn holes.

The tree was a noble specimen, and its prostrate position gave me a chance to learn not only its dimensions, but also to ascertain very nearly the number of holes which the woodpeckers had made in its bark.

In falling, the tip of the tree had broken off, and was so hidden in the general débris of fragments of branches, cones and under

Native Races of the Pacific States.

* Contributions to Ethnology, U. S. Geog. and Geol. Survey, Powell, Vol. III, 4to.

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brush, as to escape detection. The length was not less than 175 feet, the diameter of the butt just above the ground, five feet ten inches. At ninety feet the diameter was three feet eight inches. Above the ninety foot line the holes continued, but were so scattering that they are not included in the reckoning. Neither are those in the first ten feet of the trunk, as between the ten foot line and the ground they were comparatively few.

Between the ten foot line and the ninety foot line the number of holes to the square foot, with a fair allowance for verification, was from sixty to twelve. A piece of the bark, sawed from the tree by my own hands, which measures exactly twelve inches by twelve inches, contains sixty holes; this is a much smaller number than could be counted in the same sized piece in a great part of the section of eighty feet, while twelve is a very low minimum.

The two diameters as above given, when added make eight feet and eighteen inches, the average diameter being one-half of this, or about four feet nine inches; this multiplied by three, to get the circumference, gives fourteen feet and three inches; and this again multiplied by the length of the section, eighty feet, produces 1140 square feet.

Now if we add the maximum and minimum of acorn holes to the square foot (sixty and twelve), we have seventy-two, which divided by two, gives an average of thirty-six to the square foot, and thirty-six times 1140 gives a product of forty-one thousand and forty (41,040) acorn holes.

The holes are of different sizes, varying with the size of the acorn, which each hole is made to receive, for these birds are good workmen, and each acorn is nicely fitted into its special cavity. Making a fair selection of acorns as to size, I find that it takes on an average seven to make an ounce (that is, picked when green); and taking that number for a divisor, it shows the total weight of acorns required to fill the holes in the tree, is three hundred and sixty-six pounds seven ounces, avoirdupois. Whether any particular species of acorn is preferred, I am unable to say. The acorns in the tree above described, sò far as it was possible to determine them without the cups, which the woodpeckers 'reject, appeared to belong to the nearest adjacent oaks, Quercus chrysolepis. This oak is very abundant all around the mountain and is itself peculiar in having two forms of leaf on the same twig.

At the upper end of Pope valley, not far beyond Ætna springs, I noticed a standing pine of the same species as that described and of about the same dimensions as the foregoing, which was full of holes. In Knight's valley, in August, 1879, I observed woodpecker holes closely set in the bark of a large Douglass spruce (Tsuga douglassi); and I have been informed by various parties that these woodpeckers also bore and deposit acorns in the bark of various species of oaks.

Sometimes the acorn holes are made in the wood, as I have been informed by a friend, Mr. C. H. Dwinelle, of the University of California, who has seen such holes in a species of white oak in Alexander valley. He also related an instance of the "carpintero" sticking acorns in a crack between the boards in the porch of a house in Redwood city, San Mateo county.

Mr. J. W. Bice, of the University, has also observed acorns stored in the white oaks near Healdsburg, in Sonoma county, as well as in the cracks between the boards in and around the projecting eaves of barns and houses. Where the projecting rafters are boxed in, sometimes they will find a hole, and at other times make one, and store acorns in large quantities in such places.

In clearing land the trees are girdled, and in about two years the bark drops off, leaving the exposed wood of the trunk in a sappy state, particularly on the side which is usually in the shade, and this side is especially selected by the woodpeckers for their purposes. They not infrequently drop acorns down chimneys, where of course the result of their labor is without any advantage.

Upon turning to the volume on Ornithology in the Geological Survey (of California) publications, in reference to this species of woodpecker, it says: "They are fond of playing together around the branches, uttering their rattling calls, and often darting off to take a short sail in the air, returning to the same spot. They have a habit, peculiar to them, of drilling small holes in the bark of trees, and fitting acorns tightly into them, each one being carefully adapted and driven tight. The bark is often so full of these as to scarcely leave room to crowd in another without destroying the bark entirely. These are generally considered as laid up for a winter supply of food; but while in this climate no such provision is necessary, it is also very improbable that birds of this family. would feed on hard nuts or seeds of any kind. The more prob

able explanation is, that they are preserved for the sake of the grubs they contain so frequently, which, being very small when the acorn falls, grow until they eat the whole interior, when they are a welcome delicacy for the bird. Whether they select only those containing grubs, or put away all they meet with, is uncertain; but as they leave great numbers in the tree untouched, it is probable that these are sound acorns, and often become a supply to the squirrels and the jays."

Without questioning the foregoing as to the preference of the woodpecker for animal food, and especially for the larvæ often contained in the acorns, it is undeniable that, in common with the jays, they are exceedingly fond of fruit, as many an orchardist can testify; and their predilection for almonds before these nuts are quite ripe, is well known to the cost of many almond growers; that they eat other nuts and also acorns to some extent, I have no doubt. The jays and squirrels are quite likely benefited by the acorn-storing habit of this species of woodpecker; and I have been told that the jay sometimes assists the woodpecker by bringing acorns for the carpintero to deposit in the bark; and further that sometimes the jays put pebbles in the acorn holes "to fool the woodpeckers;" but these latter statements, though perhaps true, need confirmation.

As several woodpeckers are engaged in the work at the same time on the same tree, their operations, as may be imagined, are carried on with a good deal of vivacity and noise, in which the jays become interested, and dart about, adding to the tumult in their own peculiar chattering way.

The latter have related singularities in the matter of foodstoring, as will be seen below. The friend, Mr. Dwinelle, whom I have already quoted, states that the large thistle, which is abundant in certain places in Alameda county, owes its distribution in part to the jays who take the seeds, which are of good size, and plant them in the ground. He further states that a friend of his, who fed Indian corn to his chickens, had observed the jays fly down and pick up a kernel and then go off a short distance and plant it; in this way he discovered how it was that stalks of maize came up and were growing where he had never planted.

Mr. Dwinelle has himself seen a jay plant an acorn in the ground of his (Mr. D.'s) house-yard or garden in Oakland. The bird deliberately made a hole, thrust in the acorn, covered it and

then put a chip on the spot, perhaps the latter as a mulch; then flew away, found another acorn, which it accidentally dropped in a growth of periwinkle (myrtle), and after searching for it without finding it, gave up and flew away.

As it is hardly presumable that the jays plant either the corn or the thistle for the purpose of perpetuating those species of plants with the object of obtaining food from future crops, it is likely that being full fed at the time, with appetites satisfied, they simply buried the seed for future need, as a dog buries a bone, and forgot all about it, or not needing the same, the, seeds remained where the birds planted them, until they germinated and grew into plants.

The holes made by the woodpeckers in the bark of trees also serve as a lurking place for beetles, ants and other insects, so that both vegetable and animal food are brought together side by side to furnish a meal in time of need, in which perhaps the jays sometimes participate. Judging by the tree herein described, it would seem as if there were enough for all.

Mr. Bice is of the opinion that the acorns are stored simply for the larvae, which the carpintero eats after the maggot has attained a good size. He also relates the following, which is worthy of note: "On cutting down a hollow oak on his father's place, a woodpecker's nest was discovered after the tree had fallen, and a young bird of the carpintero species was found and caught, being unable to fly. It was carefully reared, and became a great pet with the family. After it had reached maturity and was perfectly able to fly, though no restraint was placed upon it, it would come at once in answer to call, leaving its fellows in the trees. Upon one occasion, when the family went several miles from home to visit a friend, the bird followed them, though at the time they were not aware of it, and only learned the fact from the friend whom they had visited, and who caught and kept the bird until an opportunity offered for returning it. Probably if it had not been caught it would have followed the family back."

There is a larger species of woodpecker, with plumage much resembling that of M. formicivorus, which sometimes appears in flocks and helps itself, or tries to do so, to the stores laid up by el carpintero, who bravely fights the maurauder. I have been unable to learn to what species these depredators belong.

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