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Red-shouldered Hawk
and
Spring Woodpecker Survey

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The Red-shouldered Hawk was once the most common hawk in southern Ontario, but has experienced a dramatic, continent-wide decline in the last century. The Red-shouldered Hawk is now a rare breeding bird in Ontario, and is classified as a species of Special Concern by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) and Vulnerable in Ontario by the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources (OMNR).

Red-shouldered Hawks occur in a broad array of North American forest types, but they prefer large tracts of mature to old growth, mixed forests, especially bottomland hardwood riparian areas and flooded deciduous swamps. Unfortunately, this habitat is in short supply! The dependence of Red-shouldered Hawks on large, mature forests raised the concern that timber management practices may be negatively affecting the hawks.

For this reason, the Red-shouldered Hawk was chosen as a key indicator species to monitor the effects of forest management by the Wildlife Assessment Program of the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources. The Red-shouldered Hawk and Spring Woodpecker Survey was initiated in 1990. The primary objectives of the survey are to provide statistically reliable population trend data for Red-shouldered Hawks, Pileated Woodpeckers, and Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers and determine whether forest management practices are negatively affecting these species. Hawks and woodpeckers in general are not well-surveyed on other volunteer bird surveys (such as the Breeding Bird Survey) because of their early breeding season and secretive nature. The study area is restricted to deciduous or mixed forest habitat in central Ontario, the core breeding range of the Red-shouldered Hawk.

Volunteers use tape playback to elicit calls of Red-shouldered Hawks along roadside routes at 20 predetermined stops during one morning in May. Volunteers keep track of the number of Red-shouldered Hawks that respond to the tape, as well as the number of other raptors and woodpeckers that they see or hear at each stop. Volunteers receive a training tape to help them learn the calls of woodpeckers and raptors found in Ontario, as well as an instruction booklet, a broadcast tape, and data sheets that they return to Bird Studies Canada after completing the survey.

So far, results have shown that the Ontario Red-shouldered Hawk population is fairly stable. Continued monitoring is required, however, if we are to detect any major population fluctuations. If you would like to participate in the Red-shouldered Hawk and Spring Woodpecker Survey, please contact:

Jody Allair,
Recruitment and Outreach Coordinator,

Bird Studies Canada
P.O. Box 160, Port Rowan, ON, N0E 1M0
Toll-free phone: (888) 448-2473
Fax: (519) 586-3532
E-mail: raptor@bsc-eoc.org

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