FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 30, 2024
Red-cockaded woodpecker endangered
classification downlisted
COLLEGE STATION, Texas—After 54 years of
being classified as a federally endangered species, the red-cockaded woodpecker
classification status has been downlisted to threatened as a result of decades-long
conservation efforts.
This reclassification was announced
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service after reviewing several years’ worth of
data and other information from their partners and the public. Many of the
populations of these woodpeckers are currently stable or increasing.
The red-cockaded woodpecker is a
unique, non-migratory woodpecker species that resides across the southeastern
United States. The species was originally classified as endangered in 1970 when
it was estimated that there were fewer than 10,000 individuals and between 1,470
active clusters--family groups of one or more individuals. Today, it is
estimated that there are 7,800 active clusters ranging from Virginia to Texas.
Over 1,800 red-cockaded woodpeckers
are dwelling in East Texas. Red-cockaded woodpeckers are located at the W.G.
Jones and I.D. Fairchild State Forests as well as Texas’ four National Forests
and a few private lands.
Texas
A&M Forest Service collaborates with state and federal agencies, as well as
private landowners, to implement rigorous red-cockaded woodpecker conservation
efforts. Donna Work, Texas A&M
Forest Service Biologist and Red-cockaded Woodpecker Coordinator, has led these
efforts for the agency since 1996.
“I’m
glad to see that many of the populations are improving enough across this
bird’s range for them to be downlisted,” said Work. “All the wonderful partners
I have worked with have helped me tremendously with knowledge and management of
these special birds. Together, we can continue to keep our Texas populations
healthy and thriving.”
Work has collaborated with the U.S.
Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to relocate unrelated
juvenile birds from other populations – Kisatchie National Forest in Louisiana
and Sam Houston National Forest in Texas – to the W.G. Jones and I.D. Fairchild
State Forests. This helps enhance the gene pool of these isolated populations
of the red-cockaded woodpecker.
Other management activities
conducted on these two state forests include habitat improvement through underbrush
reduction, tree thinning and prescribed burning; adding artificial cavities
where needed; and monitoring for nesting and banding the nestlings at times.
Red-cockaded woodpeckers are the
only woodpecker species in North America that construct cavities in living pine
trees. As a result, they face many natural challenges and stressors such as a lack
of suitable dwelling and foraging habitats, natural disasters and the effects
of small population sizes. Rapid urbanization surrounding forests has been
identified as one of the factors that create barriers for red-cockaded
woodpeckers to travel and mate.
“Red-cockaded
woodpeckers, like other woodpeckers, help to keep insect populations in check,
including the destructive bark beetles that also live in the Pineywoods,” said
Work. “The cavities of the RCW can benefit other cavity dwellers (small birds,
reptiles, amphibians, insects, mammals) when these trees die, or when the RCW
abandons a cavity.”
Work
expressed that red-cockaded woodpecker conservation efforts will continue as
she helps educate landowners and the public on the importance of good forest
management.
“The
good thing is, when we follow good forest management practices, we are not just
helping the RCW, but also a host of other wildlife, insects, and plants that
are associated with the same ecosystem,” said Work.
As part of this reclassification, The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is finalizing a 4(d) rule of the Endangered
Species Act for the species. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service stated that this
rule will provide flexibility to reduce regulatory burdens by exempting certain
activities that do not significantly harm threatened species. More information
about this rule can be found here: https://www.regulations.gov/document/FWS-R4-ES-2019-0018-0001.
Work said that while the
classification has changed, red-cockaded woodpeckers will still be protected,
adding, “Texas A&M Forest
Service, along with many other land managers with these woodpeckers, have
committed to continue managing these woodpeckers in the same way.”
Learn more about Work’s efforts to promote
healthy, diverse red-cockaded woodpecker genetics and habitat on Texas State
Forests here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=uAA9cbLIM9w.
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Photos and videos: https://agrilife.photoshelter.com/galleries/C00004ctr0uNLkTQ/G00005ME8ZzrlhiE/Red-cockaded-woodpecker
Texas A&M Forest Service Contacts:
Donna Work, Biologist and Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Coordinator, dwork@tfs.tamu.edu, 936-546-3547
Communications
Office, newsmedia@tfs.tamu.edu, 979-458-6606