The Elusive Pileated Woodpecker: Signs of Its Presence

Leonard Weber

February 23, 2024

A little over 15 months ago (November 14, 2022), I reported my first sighting of a Pileated Woodpecker in Eliza Howell Park in Detroit. Since then, I have seen one in the park three other times, but just once in the last 12 months (on January 10, 2024).

Since the January sighting, I have spent hours searching for this magnificent bird. (Note: this photo was taken at another location, not the park.)

Pileated Woodpecker, photo
courtesy of Margaret Weber

The bird has eluded me, but the search has provided significant evidence of recent presence.

Pileated Woodpeckers eat many Carpenter Ants (estimated to be about 50% of their total diet), digging deeply into dead wood to find them. Carpenter Ants are social insects, with large numbers of them living together in colonies. The ants make tunnels in dead wood and Pileated Woodpeckers dig deep gouges in dead trees and logs to get to them, lapping up Carpenter Ants by the dozens (perhaps by the hundreds) with their long sticky tongues.

The bird in the photo above is excavating a dead standing tree. In the next photo, from a different location, one is working on a log.

Photo courtesy of Margaret Weber

Recently excavated large gouges in trees or in logs are signs that a Pileated Woodpecker was here not long ago. The next three photos were taken this February in Eliza Howell Park.

In addition to more opportunity for the exciting experience of watching Pileated Woodpeckers working for their dinner, the on-going presence of Pileated Woodpeckers in Eliza Howell Park would mean that the species has moved into Detroit, an expansion of its range.

The part of Michigan (southeast Michigan) that is not part of the Pileated’s regular range includes Detroit.

Map from Cornell
Lab Of Ornithology

At this point, we have both types of evidence of its (recent) presence:  occasional visual sightings and several examples of ant-seeking excavations. What is not known yet is whether there is just one individual or a pair and whether it/they have moved in or are just visiting.

So the search continues!

Kathleen Garrett called
my attention to this tree

I think it likely that these two holes in a dead Black Cherry tree were made by a Pileated Woodpecker. If so, perhaps it is making fun of the searchers!

12 responses to “The Elusive Pileated Woodpecker: Signs of Its Presence”

  1. I live in Algonac, Michigan and recently had three of them at my house! They are quite beautiful and very large!

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  2. Byron Dearixon Avatar
    Byron Dearixon

    we saw two of these working on a pecan tree north of Houston. Looks identical in all respects but not quite as big as a crow but a very large woodpecker This tree was not dead.Maybe it would make 16in if stretched from beak to end of tail.

    Byron Dearixon bdearixon@sbcglobal.net

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  3. I live outside of boston by 5 mins and just say one at my hanging feeder.

    I also see Cardinals regularly & Bluejays, nothing like this guy.

    very large in comparison, nearly the size of a Bluejay yet more slender and defined.

    wow

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  4. Janet Ann Brown Avatar
    Janet Ann Brown

    I live in Silver Spring, MD. I saw one this morning. Couldn’t get my camera out fast enough to photo.

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  5. I live near the Indian river in florida and just saw beautiful one working on a palm tree. It had been a while since I saw the last one.

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  6. I live in Canajoharie NY and I just have seen 4 of them on my neighbors tree which is on the edge of my driveway. They have been here a few days now.

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  7. Just saw and saw a pileated woodpecker in my back yard here in Greensboro NC. Beautiful bird!

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  8. Saw one this morning in my backyard, high up in a tree. I live near the Tippecanoe River Valley in south White County, Indiana.

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  9. We saw one today, Thanksgiving Day, in our backyard! We see small ones all the time, but this is the first time to see this very large, majestic bird.

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  10. I just had one here this morning in Harrison michigan 12/8/2024

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  11. We have a Pileated Woodpecker living on our property on Whidbey Island in Washington.

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  12. We live by a nature preserve in Austintown, which is in Northeast Ohio.

    Woody and sometimes his bride visit whenever my husband hangs woodpecker suet on the tree in the back yard. To us, a 16-19 inch bird is quite large!! They are mesmerizing!

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