01554nas a2200145 4500008004100000245009800041210006900139300001300208490000700221520102100228653000901249653001501258100001601273856011901289 1986 eng d00aWinter population dynamics of three species of mast-eating birds in the eastern United States0 aWinter population dynamics of three species of masteating birds a407 -4180 v983 a
All three species store and consume mast. Red-headed Woodpecker populations were most variable and Blue Jay populations were more variable than those of Black-capped Chickadees. Year-to- year comparisons show that Red-headed Woodpeckers are relatively nomadic in winter; that Blue Jays make movements between New England and the Mid-Atlantic coast with some regularity; and that Black-capped Chickadees may make relatively short population movements between central and southern New England. Movements of the 3 species were independent of mean January temperatures at the count areas examined. Results presented here are consistent with the hypothesis that increased dependence on mast as a winter food source is correlated with increased variability in winter population dynamics. In particular, the nearly periodic nature of the east-west shift of Red-headed Woodpecker high counts among years is strikingly similar to the periodic pattern of boreal seed-eating birds discovered by Bok asnd Lepthien (1976a)
10abird10apopulation1 aSmith, K.G. uhttp://lter.konza.ksu.edu/content/winter-population-dynamics-three-species-mast-eating-birds-eastern-united-states