Dealing With Woodpecker and Sapsucker Tree Issues

Woodpecker perched on a tree with beak poised to peck.

RaechelJ/Pixabay

Many woodpeckers and sapsuckers are tree bark-feeding birds with unique clinging feet, long tongues, and specialized beaks. These beaks are designed to help with communicating the possession of territory to rivals and locating and accessing sap and insects. This is done mostly by rapid drumming and pecking noisily on tree trunks with their beaks. There is a big difference between the two birds.

Sapsuckers Versus Woodpeckers

The insect-eating woodpecker (family Picidae) has a long tongue — in many cases as long as the woodpecker itself — that can be quickly extended forward to capture insects from the inner and outer bark. Woodpeckers explore decaying cavities on trees and spots that have active insect activity.

Woodpeckers tend to feed only on dead or dying wood and are generally considered harmless to a tree. They do not feed on tree sap like their sap-sucking cousins, which can seriously damage trees. 

You can tell the difference between the birds that have been visiting your trees by the holes they leave behind. Sapsuckers have a tendency to form lots of small holes in horizontal lines. This allows for sap to flow out when they are feeding. Meanwhile, the holes left behind by woodpeckers are larger and can be found in different spots up and down a tree. 

The sapsucker is a serious tree pest. The most common sapsucker in North America, also the most destructive, is the American yellow-bellied sapsucker. The bird is one of four true sapsuckers in the family Sphyrapicus. 

The American yellow-bellied sapsucker can attack, kill trees, and seriously degrade wood quality. Sapsuckers are migratory and can affect different tree and shrub species on a seasonal basis throughout eastern North America. It spends summers in Canada and the northeastern United States and migrates to the southern states in the winter.

Trees in Danger

Certain tree species, like birch and maple, are particularly susceptible to death after being damaged by yellow-bellied sapsuckers. Wood decay, stain fungi, and bacteria may enter through the feeding holes.

A USFS study concludes that when a red maple has been fed on by a sapsucker, its mortality rate goes up to 40 percent. Gray birch is even higher, at a 67 percent mortality rate. Hemlock and spruce trees are other food favorites but seem more impervious to sapsucker damage. The death rate for these trees is at one to three percent.

How a Woodpecker Feeds

A woodpecker searches the surfaces of tree trunks and branches for wood-boring beetles, carpenter ants, and other insects. The pecking style they use for feeding is very different than their territorial drumming, which is done mainly in the spring of the year.

When looking for insects, only a few pecks at a time are made. Then, the bird explores the resulting hole with its specialized bill and tongue. This behavior continues until an insect is found or the bird is satisfied that one is not there. The woodpecker may hop a few inches away and peck at another place. The bark holes created by this feeding activity often occur randomly as the bird explores with pecking up, down, and around a tree trunk.

This pecking style, for the most part, does not harm the tree. However, it can be a problem when a bird decides to visit wood siding, wooden eaves, and window frames. Woodpeckers can become destructive to property, especially wood cabins that are near mixed urban and woodland zones.

How a Sapsucker Feeds

Sapsuckers attack living wood to get at the sap inside. They often return to the tree to increase the size of the holes for more, fresh sap. Insects, especially those attracted to the sweet sap exuding from sap holes, are often captured and fed to the young during the breeding season.

Repeated attacks of feeding sapsuckers can kill a tree by girdling, which occurs when a ring of bark around the trunk is severely injured. 

In the United States, yellow-bellied sapsuckers are listed and protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. Taking, killing, or possessing this species is illegal without a permit.

How to Repel Sapsuckers

To discourage sapsuckers from feeding on your yard tree, wrap hardware cloth or burlap around the area of attack. To protect buildings and other outside personal property, place lightweight plastic bird-type netting over the area.

Visual control using toy plastic twirlers fastened to the eaves, aluminum foil, or brightly-colored plastic strips are somewhat successful in repelling birds by movement and reflection. Loud noises can also help but may be inconvenient to maintain over an extended period of time. 

You can also smear on a sticky repellent. Deer repellent is also said to discourage feeding when sprayed on the tapped area. Remember that birds may choose another nearby tree for future tapping. It may be better to sacrifice the tapped and already damaged tree in favor of the loss of another tree due to future tapping damage.

Source

Rushmore, Francis M. "Sapsucker." U.S.D.A. Forest Service Research Paper NE-136, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1969.

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Nix, Steve. "Dealing With Woodpecker and Sapsucker Tree Issues." ThoughtCo, Apr. 5, 2023, thoughtco.com/dealing-with-woodpecker-sapsucker-tree-problems-1342929. Nix, Steve. (2023, April 5). Dealing With Woodpecker and Sapsucker Tree Issues. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/dealing-with-woodpecker-sapsucker-tree-problems-1342929 Nix, Steve. "Dealing With Woodpecker and Sapsucker Tree Issues." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/dealing-with-woodpecker-sapsucker-tree-problems-1342929 (accessed March 28, 2024).